Reel 2 - University of Oklahoma

A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
Research Collections in American Radicalism
General Editors:
Mark Naison and Maurice Isserman
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_
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
V
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Part I.
The Industrial Workers of the World
UNTVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
Research Collections in American Radicalism
General Editors:
Mark Naison and Maurice Isserman
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
Parti.
The Industrial Workers of the World
Edited by Melvyn Dubofsky
Associate Editor
Gregory Murphy
Guide compiled by
Martin Schipper
A microfilm project of
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
An Imprint of CIS
4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Department of Justice investigative files [microfilm].
p. cm. -- (Research collections in American radicalism)
Accompanied by printed reel guides, compiled by Martin P.
Schipper.
Includes indexes.
Contents: pt. 1. The Industrial Workers of the World / edited by
Melvyn Dubofsky • pt 2. The Communist Party / edited by Mark
Naison.
ISBN 1-55655-055-3 (microfilm : pt. 1)
ISBN 1-55655-056-1 (microfilm : pt. 2)
1. Industrial Workers of the World-History-Sources.
2. Communist Party of America-History-Sources. 3. United States.
Dept. of Justice-Archives. I. Schipper, Martin Paul.
II. Dubofsky, Melvyn, 1934- . m. Naison, Mark, 1946- .
IV. United States. Dept of Justice. V. University Publications of
America (Firm) VI. Series.
[HD8055]
322,.2~dc20
90-12989
CIP
Copyright © 1989 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-055-3.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
v
Source Note
-
ix
Editorial Note
ix
Scope and Content Note
xi
Reel Index
Reell
RG 60•Straight Numerical File
Casefde
Casefile
Casefde
Casefde
150139
185354
150139 cont
185354 cont
1
1
2
2
Reel 2
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefde 185354 cont
2
Reel 3
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefde 185354 cont
Casefde 186701
Casefde 185354 cont
3
4
4
Reels 4-6
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefde 186701 cont
4
Reel?
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefde 186701 cont
Casefde 186813
13
16
ReelS
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Caseffle 188032
17
m
Reel 9
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile
Casefile
Casefile
Casefile
188032 cont
188044
188561
189152
19
20
20
20
Reel 10
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 189152 cont
Casefile 189738
Casefile 193498
Casefile 195397
Casefile 210791
21
21
21
22
22
Reel 11
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files
Casefile 35-362
23
Casefile 36-52
23
Casefile [No Casefile Number]
Casefile 38-487
23
23
Reel 12
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Casefile 39-240
24
Reel 13
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Casefile 39-241
27
Reel 14
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Casefile 39-241 cont
Casefile 39-242
30
31
Reel 15
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Casefile 39-242 cont
32
Subject Index
33
IV
INTRODUCTION
In June and July 1905 leading American Socialists, left-wing trade unionists, and assorted radicals met
in Chicago to found a new labor organization that would serve as an alternative to the more moderate and
exclusive American Federation of Labor (AFL). During the sessions, which featured the contributions of
such famous American radicals as Eugene V. Debs, William D. "Big Bill" Haywood, Daniel DeLeon,
Lucy Parsons (the widow of Haymarket martyr Albert Parsons), and Mary "Mother" Jones (the coal
miners' angel), the participants created a new revolutionary labor organization committed to the
destruction of capitalism. The Industrial Workers of the World, or IWW and Wobblies, as the new
organization came to be better known, amalgamated an unlikely and fractious group of radical men and
women. For the previous fifteen years Debs and DeLeon, for example, had been the most bitter of
enemies; yet in Chicago they shook hands over what DeLeon described as the "bloody chasm of the
past." Apparently the parents of the IWW were able to sublimate their often rancorous and divisive
personal and political differences in order to reject unanimously AFL-style trade unionism. The result of
their common effort was the creation of the most radical, mass labor organization in United States history.
At first, however, the IWW seemed to have been stillborn. Between 1905 and 1908, it barely survived
infancy. Debs and DeLeon quickly resumed their bloody warfare, as members of the Socialist Party of
America (Debs' organization) and the Socialist Labor party (DeLeon's group) brought their political
battles inside the IWW. At the same time, so-called "revolutionary" unionists fought with their more
moderate trade union brothers and sisters. To compound the internal disarray, "Big Bill" Haywood and
Charles Moyer, the leaders of the largest single trade union affiliate of the IWW•the Western Federation
of Miners (indeed many observers claimed that the IWW at birth was merely the WFM in disguise)•
were imprisoned on murder charges by the state of Idaho in 1906. While Haywood and Moyer spent
almost two years in jail and in court before being acquitted of all charges, the IWW tore itself apart. First,
Debs and his supporters walked out in anger at DeLeon's influence. Next, the WFM, under an
increasingly moderate new leadership, left the IWW. Finally, in 1908, a majority among the remaining
members expelled DeLeon and his most fervent followers. Upon his release from prison in 1908, even
Haywood, the chair at the 1905 convention, declined to associate with what remained of the IWW.
Yet, having barely survived infancy, the IWW after 1909 achieved notoriety as the most militant and
dangerous organization on the American left. Under the leadership of Vincent St John (1908-1915) and
"Big Bill" Haywood, who returned to active membership in 1911 (1915-1918), the IWW became famous
for the type of workers it sought to organize and also for its singular ideology and tactics. At the time
when the American labor movement appealed primarily to more skilled workers, the IWW recruited
among unskilled and exploited immigrants, nonwhites, and migrant workers. To poverty-wracked
workers who often lacked the right to vote and who despised the institutions of government that had so
often oppressed them, the IWW promised a nonpolitical revolution that would free them from wage
slavery. Its leaders and spokespeople explained that once all the nation's workers combined into one big
union they would have sufficient strength to begin the social general strike, which would displace the
capitalists from power and place the workers in possession of the means of production and distribution. In
Haywood's own words at the moment of the general strike, "control of industry will pass from the
capitalists to the masses and the capitalists will vanish from the face of the earth." And when that day
came, he added, "diere will be a new society...in which there will be no battle between capitalist and
wage earner, but...every man will have free access to land and its resources. In that day...the machinery
can be made the slave of the people instead of a part of the people being made the slave of the
machinery."
The Wobblies called their revolutionary society "in which each worker will have a share in the
ownership and a voice in the control of industry, and in which each shall receive the full product of his
labor" variously the workers' commonwealth, industrial democracy, and sometimes even industrial
communism. Whatever they called it, these American radicals who proposed to make a revolution
without political organization and through direct action at the point of production shared a common
perspective with those European labor left-wingers known as syndicalists. As one contemporary of the
Wobblies noted, notwithstanding superficial variations caused by different economic and political
traditions in various countries, the "living spirit of revolutionary purpose unifies French and British
syndicalism and American industrial unions (the IWW)."
Syndicalism, as preached and practiced in the IWW, was intended to attract and motivate the
oppressed, the exploited, the embittered, the poorly paid, overworked, unorganized men and women the
Wobblies sought to recruit. It is not intellectuals and elites who count for us, said one Wobbly, no, "it is
the obscure Bill Jones on the firing line, with stink in his clothes, rebellion in his brain, hope in his heart,
determination in his eye and direct action in his gnarled fist"
For ten years between 1909 and 1918 the IWW took its message of direct action and revolutionary
aims to hundreds of thousands of Bill and Betty Joneses. It fought with them for free speech on the street
comers and public places of such cities as Spokane, Washington, Missoula, Montana, Fresno and San
Diego, California, and Minot, South Dakota. After all, it was only in those public spaces that the IWW
could directly address large numbers of migratory workers who wintered in cities or lingered there
between jobs in the woods, on the farms, and on construction. The IWW's fights for free speech in urban
America, moreover, first brought the organization to the attention of the Justice Department during the
administration of William Howard Taft (1909-1913). State and local officials urged the federal
government to take legal action against subversives who regularly crossed state lines. In 1911 and 1912,
however, Washington saw no constitutional grounds for action although federal officials felt equally
antipathetic to the Wobblies. While the IWW fought for free speech, it also battled for higher wages,
shorter hours, and better working conditions in McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, the woods of the Pacific
Northwest and southwest Louisiana, the textile mills of New England and the mid-Atlantic states, and
wherever workers needed a union presence. Despite the IWW's rising militancy between 1909 and 1911,
despite its constant battles with employers and public officials in every region of the nation, it never
numbered more than 18,000 paid-up members in those years.
Then, in January 1912, the IWW assumed the leadership of a theretofore spontaneous and successful
walkout staged by 20,000 immigrant textile workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts. The Lawrence strike
transformed the IWW's leaders and organizers•Haywood, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Joseph Ettor, and
Arturo Giovannitti•into nationally known radical celebrities. Their surprising victory in Lawrence and
success in unionizing a polyglot labor force consisting of Italian, Polish, Jewish, French-Canadian, and
even Syrian immigrants, transformed the IWW into an organization that many contemporaries feared was
capable of making a revolution in the United States. Fresh from their success in New England, the
Wobblies took their crusade among unorganized workers to Little Falls, New York, Akron, Ohio, and
most notably in 1913 Paterson, New Jersey. The Paterson silk strike received even more publicity than
the previous year's battle in Lawrence. It also produced one of the most famous events in American labor
history, the Paterson Pageant, a dramatization of the strike written, produced, and staged by John Reed
with the help of other Greenwich Village intellectuals and enacted at Madison Square Garden in
Manhattan before an audience of thousands. Unlike the strike in Lawrence, however, the one in Paterson
ended in failure, a defeat that coincided with the onset of a sharp economic contraction between 1913 and
19IS that increased unemployment and decimated trade unionism, especially among the less skilled
whom the IWW organized. Once again the IWW seemed as feeble as it had been first in 1908 and then in
1911, causing St John to resign as the organization's top official in 1915.
World War I revived die IWW's fortunes. As war orders poured into the country from the belligerents
in Europe, the American economy boomed and employment tightened. The IWW again became a real
presence among agricultural workers in the plains states and the valleys of California; copper miners in
Arizona and Montana; lumber workers in the Pacific Northwest; and iron miners on the Mesabi Range of
northern Minnesota. Under the astute leadership of Bill Haywood, who replaced St. John as general
VI
secretary treasurer, and Arthur Nef, who headed the newly formed Agricultural Workers' Organization
(AWO), the IWW rapidly increased its membership and won improved conditions for many of its
members. As the organization's health and strength grew, employers and state officials once more turned
to Washington for assistance in their efforts to curb labor radicalism. This time they looked to President
Woodrow Wilson and his Justice Department, which in 1915 began an investigation of. the IWW to
determine whether there were grounds for federal action. In 1915, as in 1911 and 1912, the federal
government determined that constitutionally, any violence, crime, or subversion committed by members
of the IWW fell solely within the purview of the states. But that was before the United States entered the
war as a belligerent.
After April 1917 and the United States' declaration of war, the IWW became a federal problem. Soon
after that date, the IWW reached its peak of nearly 150,000 paid-up members, a total that reflected more
than a half-million workers passing through its ranks in the course of a year: Even more startling, the
Wobblies were proving ¿themselves an effective presence in several sectors of the economy vital to the
war effort•wheat, copper, and lumber productions as well as shipping. Employers and state officials
from Minnesota, Montana, Washington, Oregon, and California continued to urge President Wilson to act
against the IWW. This time the president acted, at first hesitantly and then decisively. He ordered federal
troops to guard vital industries in the western states and he authorized military intelligence to gather
information about the IWW. In practice, the army played no small part in breaking strikes led by the
IWW as well as in gathering "intelligence." Wilson also ordered the Justice Department to begin
surveillance of the Wobblies and, especially, to seek evidence of sabotage and subversion. Between May
and August 1917, the Bureau of Investigation in the Justice Department found no hard evidence against
the IWW. Yet, as strikes associated with the IWW affected industries vital to the war effort and state
officials in the west continued to demand federal action, Wilson perceived no choice but to act against the
Wobblies. In August 1917 he unleashed the Justice Department against the Wobblies in an effort to
gather enough evidence to prosecute IWW members in federal courts. In September 1917 agents from the
Justice Department raided IWW offices throughout the nation and shortly thereafter served warrants on
the organization's entire leadership, far more than 200 men and women. The bulk of the leaders,
including the most famous, were held for trial in Chicago; the remainder of lesser officials faced charges
in federal courtrooms in Wichita, Sacramento, and Omaha. During the trials, which occurred in Chicago
in 1918 and Sacramento and Wichita in 1919 (the Omaha prisoners were eventually released without
trial), the prosecution based its case on materials gathered by the Justice Department and intelligence
amassed by the department's agents. Throughout the trials the Justice Department spied on the indictees,
their families, their friends, their associates, and their fellow workers in the IWW. The trials themselves
produced the expected result•without exception, juries convicted the defendants, most of whom were
sentenced to terms in the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas.
The IWW never recovered from its repression during the war years. The states finished what the
federal government started by enacting "criminal syndicalism" laws that made membership in the IWW
of and by itself a crime. Moreover, the direct federal surveillance of the IWW that began during the war
was to continue for the next four decades. Military intelligence, particularly in the 1920s and 1930s,
continued to keep track of IWW members, sometimes imagining subversive conspiracies where none
existed. So, too, did the Justice Department, which read all the correspondence of the Leavenworth
inmates, spied on them after they were pardoned by President Harding, and ran surveillance on all the
members of the IWW even when the organization was at its weakest. Probably at no time in its history
after 1918 was the IWW without members directly or indirectly in employ of the Justice Department.
During the peak years of the Cold War between 1947 and 1955, when the IWW had few members, lacked
influence at the point of production, and acted in a decidedly anti-Soviet, anti-Stalinist fashion, it merited
inclusion on the attorney general's list of subversive organizations. As a consequence, there is probably
no better set of records with which to investigate the IWW" s history from its peak of influence during the
World War I years through its subsequent decline and erratic course over the next five decades than the
records of the Department of Justice.
Melvyn Dubofsky
Professor of History and Sociology
State University of New York at Binghamton
vu
Suggested Readings
Carlson, Peter. Roughneck: the Life and Times ofBig Bill Haywood (Norton, 1983). A biography of
William D. Haywood.
Conlin, Joseph R. Bread and Roses Too: Studies of the Wobblies (Greenwood Press, 1970). A general
history of the IWW.
Dubofsky, Melvyn. Big Bill Haywood (Manchester University Press, 1987). A biography of William D.
Haywood.
. We Shall Be All: A History of the Industrial Workers of the World (University of Illinois
Press, 1988 ed.). A general history of the IWW.
Miles, Dione. Something in Common•An IWW Bibliography (Wayne State University Press, 1986). A
guide to the published literature on the IWW.
Renshaw, Patrick. The Wobblies (Doubleday, 1967). A general history of the IWW.
Thompson, Fred and Murfin, Patrick. The I.W.W., Its First Seventy Years, 1905-1975 (IWW, 1977). The
IWW's own authorized history.
vm
SOURCE NOTE
The material microfilmed for this publication are reproduced from Record Groups 60 and 204 located
at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.
EDITORIAL NOTE
The Department of Justice's records relating to the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
microfilmed here fall into two parts: the Straight Numerical Files found in the General Correspondence
collection of Record Group 60 and the Pardon Attorney Files of Record Group 204.
University Publications of America (UPA) made its selection of files to microfilm after an extensive
search of archival indexes for names of prominent IWW members, IWW-affiliated unions and
companies being struck.
UPA decided to microfilm the Pardon Attorney records of Record Group 204 because they are a
continuation of the IWW files of Record Group 60. A major feature of this series is the transcript of the
C. W. Anderson hearing, a pivotal IWW case.
IX
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE
The records of The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) at the National Archives regarding the activities
of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) can be found in various Straight Numerical Files in
Record Group 60. The Political Prisoners Files of the Pardon Attorney are located in Record Group 204.
This edition was compiled following a systematic survey of both collections.
Straight Numerical Files
The straight numerical system of record keeping at the DOJ came into existence in 1904. This method
assigned each case a six-digit number as the case was opened. The Straight Numerical Files run in
numerical order on a case-by-case basis regardless of the subject This also means that it runs in a rough
chronological order as each file was assigned a number higher than the previous one when it was opened.
The documents within each section run in reverse chronological order. As a result of this arrangement,
the chronological beginning of each case is at the end of the first section and the chronological end of the
series is at the start of the final section.
The records microfilmed in this series generally concern the political creed of the IWW, its labor
organizing and subsequent labor actions, its efforts to defend itself against prosecution through the U.S.
legal system and the policies of the DOJ toward the organization. The documents provide a first-hand
account of IWW activities through correspondence, reports, and memos of the IWW, U.S. attorneys, U.S.
marshals, state and local officials, and various businessmen and individuals. Extensive coverage is given
to appeals made on behalf of the accused by numerous unions, not all of them IWW-affiliated. These
files also delve into such topics as deportation of IWW members, IWW agitation among the black
populace, and the question of bolshevism among its members.
Political Prisoner Files
The five reels consisting of the Pardon Attorney Files regarding IWW prisoners contain six separate
subject files. These files are subdivided into individual case folders as well as general information folders
for each file. The individual case folders are generally filmed in alphabetical order within each separate
file. The general folders usually follow the individual case folders with the exception of File 39-240,
where the general file leads off the series and the Political Prisoners (Haywood case) collection brings up
the rear of the file; however, the next file, 39-241, begins with the Political Prisoners (Sacramento case)
before moving on to the individual case folders and finally concluding with a small general file.
The Pardon Attorney records contain documents that are related to the potential release of each
prisoner. The prisoners in question have generally been convicted of violating such wartime legislation as
the Espionage Act of 1917 through their activities on behalf of the IWW. Each file typically contains an
application for executive clemency; reports on the prisoner's behavior; a report by the U.S. attorney
general on the prisoner's status, along with a recommendation; a set of rules relating to applications for
pardon; appeals for release, and the question of deportation for those of foreign birth. This series includes
some documents relating to the individual's activities before imprisonment. The most prominent feature
of these records is the entire transcript of the C. W. Anderson trial.
Previously Restricted Material
Both the Straight Numerical Files in Record Group 60 and the Pardon Attorney Files of Record Group
204 contain some enclosures known as Previously Restricted Material. As its name implies, these are
records that at one time were not available to researchers. Most of these documents were related to the
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and were kept restricted by the FBI. The records in question were
subsequently reexamined and released and are now found in Previously Restricted Material files
following the case file they were originally part of.
XI
REEL INDEX
Entries in this index refer to specific casefiles in the Department of Justice Investigative Files, Part I:
The Industrial Workers of the World. This edition includes material from the Straight Numerical and
Classified Subject Files of the Department of Justice from the Holdings of the National Archives in
Washington, D.C. Entries contain the casefile number and folder or section number, if more than one.
Entries also show the span of years within a casefile, folder, or section number, as well as the number of
pages included. In the interest of accessing the material, this index indicates people and subjects, listed
in the order of appearance on the microfilm. The initials n.a. indicate that information is not available.
The four-digit numbers on the left of each column represent the frame numbers on the microfilm where
casefiles or section numbers begin.
Throughout this guide, the acronym ACLU stands for American Civil Liberties Union, the acronym
DOJ stands for U.S. Department of Justice, and the acronym IWW stands for Industrial Workers of the
World.
Reell
Frame
RG 60•Straight Numerical File
[IWW Activities in California and the Pacific Northwest] Casefile 150139
0000
Section 1.1910-1916.206pp. [For pages omitted after Frame 0064, see end of Reel 1.]
People: E. P. Marsh; William D. Haywood; Hiram W. Johnson; James McGill; Woodrow W.
Wilson; Thomas W. Gregory; Franklin K. Lane; Charles D. Hilles; George W. Wickersham; F.
W. Estabrook.
Subjects: Local union and mass meeting protests against Everett, Washington, massacre of
IWW members; Washington State Federation of Labor; DOJ investigation of activities of the
IWW in California, Oregon, Utah, and Washington; IWW membership statistics and
publications; Commission on Immigration and Housing of California; free speech movement in
San Diego, California; Republican National Committee; protests against IWW activities; free
speech movement in Spokane, Washington.
0206
Section 2.1916-1917.145pp.
People: Victor L. Berger.
Subjects: Antiwar and selective service matters; IWW activities in Minnesota and Wisconsin;
IWW publications; strikes; local union protests against Everett, Washington, massacre of IWW
members; Socialist party of America.
[Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings] Casefile 185354
0351
Section 1.1917-1918.208pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; J. Edward Morgan; Alexander Berkman;
Emma Goldman; Harry Weinberger; Thomas W. Gregory; Woodrow W. Wilson; William B.
Wilson; William D. Stephens; Samuel Gompers; Newton D. Baker.
Subjects: Mass meeting and local union protests against prosecution of Mooney and Billings;
DOJ investigation of California state prosecutions; IWW publications; protests against
extradition of Alexander Berkman from New York to California; International Workers'
Defense League publications.
Frame
0559
0562
0769
0969
0979
1054
1071
Section 1. Previously Restricted Materials. 1918.3pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Charles M. Fickert.
Subject: Recall election of San Francisco, California, prosecuting attorney.
Section 2.1918-1919.207pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; A. Mitchell Palma-; W. Bourke Cockran.
Subjects: Local union and mass meeting protests against prosecution of Mooney and Billings;
International Workers' Defense League publications.
Section 3.1919-1933.200pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Roger N. Baldwin; Clarence Senior; Frances
Perkins; Homer S. Cummings; Francis Ralston Welsh; Mattie L. Bretland; John Mooney.
Subjects: Local union and mass meeting protests against imprisonment of Mooney and Billings;
National Mooney-Billings Committee of the ACLU; Socialist party of America; Supreme Court
of California investigation of con viciions of Mooney and Billings; DOJ investigation of John
Mooney for alleged violations of U.S. Post Office Department regulations.
Section 3. Previously Restricted Materials. 1930-1931.10pp. [For pages omitted after Frame
0978, see end of Reell.]
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; J. Edgar Hoover; Francis Ralston Welsh.
Subject: Mooney and Billings case.
Section 4.1933-1934.75pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings.
Subject: Local union and mass meeting protests against imprisonment of Mooney and Billings.
Section 5. 1933-1934.17pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings.
Subject: Local union and mass meeting protests against imprisonment of Mooney and Billings.
Section 6. 1934. 61pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings.
Subject: Local union and mass meeting protests against imprisonment of Mooney and Billings.
[IWW Activities in California and the Pacific Northwest] Casefile 150139 cont. [Pages omitted after
Frame 0064 of Reel 1.]
1132
Section 1 cont 1914-1915. 37pp.
People: Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Thomas J. Mooney.
Subjects: IWW publications; International Workers' Defense League publications; insurance
company statistics regarding arson and fires in California.
[Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings] Casefile 185354 cont. [Pages omitted after Frame 0978
of Reel 1.]
1169
Section 3. Previously Restricted Materials cont 1929-1930.10pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Francis Ralston Welsh; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Mooney and Billings case; DOJ investigation of Mooney and Billings case.
Reel 2
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings] Casefile 185354 cont.
0001
Section 7. 1934. 98pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Louis Weinstock; Frank P. Walsh; John F.
Finerty; George T. Davis; Upton Sinclair; Roger N. Baldwin.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings; American Federation of Labor Trades Union Committee for Unemployment Insurance
and Relief; opinions of U.S. District Court and U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals judges in Mooney
habeas corpus proceedings; Tom Mooney Molders' Defense Committee; International Molders'
Union of North America; National Mooney-Billings Committee of the ACLU.
Frame
0099
0299
0568
0677
0748
0891
Section 8.1934-1935.200pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; John Jenkins; Gardner Jackson; Homer S.
Cummings; Rose Words; Louis Colman; E. Claude Babcock.
Subjects: Citizen, U.S. congressman, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney
and Billings; Tom Mooney Defense Committee; International Labor Defense; Federated
Moulders' (Metals) Union of Australia; DOJ investigation of Mooney and Billings case; Trade
Union Unity Council; International Red Aid.
Section 9.1935-1937.269pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Thomas J. Connor; Gunnar Mickelsen.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, U.S. congressman, and local union protests against
imprisonment of Mooney and Billings; DOJ investigation of Mooney and Billings case; Tom
Mooney Molders' Defense Committee; Woikers Alliance of America; American Labor party;
ACLU; Comintern publications; Farmer-Labor party; 1936 U.S. presidential elections.
Section 10.1937.109pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; John H. Bollens.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings; American Labor party; Progressive Women's Council; Civil Rights Federation.
Section 11.1937.71pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Willard Uphaus.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings; American League against War and Fascism; Religion and Lab«- Foundation;
International Workers Order.
Section 12.1937-1962.143pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; J. Edgar Hoover; Martin L. Sweeney.
Subjects: Requests for documents relating to Mooney and Billings case; citizen, mass meeting,
U.S. congressman, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and Billings;
Workers Alliance of America; Works Progress Administration; International Workers Order;
Communist Party of the United States of America.
Protests. Section 1.1918.194pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings; Socialist party of Kentucky; Socialist party of Indiana.
Reel 3
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings] Casefile 185354 cont.
0001
Protests. Section 2.1918. 341pp. [For pages omitted after Frame 0075, see Reel 3, Frame
1172.]
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Joseph F. Valentine.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings; Socialist party of Wisconsin; Socialist party of Ohio; International Molders' Union of
North America.
0342
Special Section 1.1917.120pp. [For pages omitted after Frame 0350, see Reel 3, Frame 1191.]
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; W. J. Durant.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings ; Socialist party of America.
0462
Special Section 2.1917-1918.146pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; John A. Fitch.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings; National Labor Council; International Workers' Defense League; Tom Mooney
Molders' Defense Committee; Socialist party of Mexico.
Frame
0608
Special Section 3.1918-1938.329pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Homer S. Cummings; Theodore Debs; Eugene
V. Debs; William Mitch; Simon J. Lubin; William Dobson.
Subjects: Citizen, mass meeting, U.S. congressman, and local union protests against
imprisonment of Mooney and Billings; International Workers Order; Railroad Employees'
Committee for the Release of Thomas J. Mooney; San Francisco Bay Area American
Federation of Labor Committee for the Freedom of Mooney and Billings; American Legion;
Commission of Immigration and Housing of California.
[IWW•General] Cásenle 186701
0937
Section 1.1917-1920.235pp.
People: Ralph M. Easley; David R. Francis; William English Walling; Cari Hayden; Adolph
Germer; Samuel Gompers; Thomas W. Gregory; Woodrow W. Wilson; Leonard Foster.
Subjects: IWW publications; citizen protests against IWW activities; Great Britain and U.S.
labor union protests against U.S. treatment of IWW members; IWW organization efforts among
black Americans; DOJ review of espionage convictions and IWW cases; National Civic
Federation; proposed U.S. recognition of Soviet Russia; U.S. Post Office Department
censorship; criminal prosecution of IWW leadership; Socialist party of America; Council of
National Defense; Employers' Association of the Inland Empire.
[Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings] Casefile 185354 cont. [Pages omitted after Frame 0075
of Reel 3.]
1172 Protests. Section 2 cont. 1918.19pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings.
Subject: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings.
[Thomas J. Mooney and Warren K. Billings] Casefile 185354 cont. [Pages omitted after Frame 0350
of Reel 3.]
1191
Special Section. Section 1 cont 1917. 15pp.
People: Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings.
Subject: Citizen, mass meeting, and local union protests against imprisonment of Mooney and
Billings.
Reel 4
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[IWW•General] Casefile 186701 cont.
0000
Section 2. 1918-1955. 23pp.
People: Roger N. Baldwin; Thomas W. Gregory.
Subjects: Requests for documents relating to DOJ raid on IWW Chicago, Illinois, office; citizen
protests against IWW activities; U.S. Shipping Board investigation of IWW activities; ACLU;
DOJ summary of the suppression of IWW outbreaks.
[IWW•By States] Cásenle 186701
0023
Section 2. Alaska. 1917-1920.15pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: IWW activities in the Alaska Territory.
Frame
[IWW•General] Casefile 186701 cont.
0038
Section 2. Previously Restricted Materials. 1917-1928.19pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Thomas W. Gregory.
Subjects: Requests for documents relating to DOJ prosecutions of IWW leadership; Labour
Defense Council of Great Britain protest against U.S. suppression of IWW; citizen protests
against alleged IWW general strike plans.
[IWW•By States] Casefile 186701 cont.
0057
Section 3. Arizona. 1919-1924.16pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; Carl Hayden.
Subjects: Citizen support for DOJ suppression of IWW in Arizona; American Legion; IWW
activities in Bisbee, Arizona.
0073
Section 4. Arkansas. 1917.7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: U.S. district attorney for the western district of Arkansas request for Secret Service
investigation of IWW activities; IWW activities in Fort Smith and Mena, Arkansas.
0080
Section 5. California. 1917-1925.150pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; William D. Haywood; William D. Stephens; John W. Preston;
Frederick H. Esmond; Thomas W. Gregory; J. Robert O'Connor; Newton D. Baker.
Subjects: State and federal suppression of IWW in California; DOJ investigations of IWW
activities; IWW publications; IWW General Defense Committee; IWW songbook; citizen
protests against IWW activities; Sacramento, California, grand jury investigation of IWW
activities; immigrant labor and strikes at mines in Shasta County, California; private detective
agencies.
0230
Section 6. Colorado. 1917-1919. 8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: DOJ investigations of IWW activities in Colorado; Agricultural Workers Industrial
Union 1919 convention in Sioux City, Iowa; citizen protests against IWW activities;
Comintern; DOJ cooperation with the President's Mediation Commission.
0238
Section 7. Connecticut 1918.4pp.
People: Louis C. Fraina.
Subject: Formation of the American Red Guard in New York City.
0242
Section 10. Florida. 1919.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Florida; American Legion.
0246
Section 13. Idaho. 1917-1921.80pp. [For pages omitted after Frame 0293, see Reel 4,
Frame 1247.]
People: Alvin M. Owsley; Harry M. Daugherty; Louis F. Post; Thomas W. Gregory; David F.
Houston.
Subjects: Americanism Commission of the American Legion; citizen protests against IWW
activities in Idaho; IWW activities in the U.S. Forest Service; state and DOJ suppression of
IWW; DOJ investigations of IWW activities; U.S. Department of Labor cooperation with DOJ;
police brutality; protests against mass arrests; U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperation with
DOJ; IWW publications; general strikes; state request for Secret Service investigation of IWW
activities.
0326
Section 14, Previously Restricted Materials. Illinois. 1917-1920.61pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover; William J. Bums; Thomas W. Gregory.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in Illinois; DOJ raids against the IWW, the
Union of Russian Workers, the Communist Labor Party of America, and the Communist Party
of America; Non-Partisan League; DOJ cooperation with the Department of Justice of Canada;
IWW activities in the United States and Canada; organization of the IWW Division of the
Radical Department of Ae Bureau of Investigation.
Frame
0387
0557
0568
0587
0597
0653
0657
0661
0679
0687
Section 14, Part 1. Illinois. 1917-1920.170pp.
People: William D. Haywood; George F. Vanderveer; William C. Fitts; Robert Lansing;
Thomas W. Gregory; Frank K. Nebeker; Claude R. Porter; John L. Metzen; Kenesaw M.
Landis; Adolph Germer.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities; General Defense Committee of the IWW; IWW
publications; Railroad Workers Industrial Union; Agricultural Workers Industrial Union;
requests for access to IWW documents held by Judge Kenesaw M. Landis seized in DOJ raids;
DOJ position regarding bail for IWW defendants; DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in
Illinois; bomb explosion in the U.S. Post Office Building, Chicago, Illinois; DOJ cooperation
with U.S. Department of State; request from the Bulgarian Minister for special privileges for an
immigrant IWW defendant; press coverage of IWW leadership trial; draft indictment against
Adolph Germer, et al., Socialist party of America, for pro-German matters.
Section 14, Part 2. Illinois. 1922-1924.11pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities; citizen protests against IWW activities in
Illinois.
Section 15. Indiana. 1917-1927.19pp.
People: William J. Donovan.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in Indiana; citizen protests against IWW
activities; American Legion; radical activities; strikes in Indiana coal fields.
Section 16. Iowa. 1917-1919.10pp.
People: Claude R. Porter.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in Iowa; 1919 IWW convention in Sioux City,
Iowa; state and federal conspiracy laws.
Section 17. Kansas. 1918-1921.56pp.
People: Samuel B. Amidon; A. Mitchell Palmer; C. W. Anderson; George F. Vanderveer;
Claude R. Porter.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in Kansas; DOJ prosecution of C. W. Anderson,
et al., Wichita, Kansas, IWW case; DOJ cooperation with state authorities; Agricultural
Workers Industrial Union; DOJ position regarding bail for IWW defendants.
Section 18. Kentucky. 1917-1918.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: DOJ investigation of Espionage Act matters in Kentucky.
Section 19. Louisiana. 1920-1922.4pp.
People: Lucille B. Milner; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in Louisiana and Arkansas; DOJ raids; ACLU.
Section 21. Maine and Maryland. 1918-1924.18pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Maine and Maryland; U.S. Department of
Commerce cooperation with DOJ.
Section 22. Massachusetts. 1917.8pp.
People: George W. Anderson; Thomas W. Gregory.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW members in Massachusetts; private detective agencies.
Section 23. Michigan. 1917-1921.60pp.
People: Charles Moyer; Arnold Petersen; S. G. Bargery; William C. Fitts; William B. Wilson;
Thomas W. Gregory; William D. Haywood; Woodrow W. Wilson; John W. Davis; Charles F.
Clyne.
Subjects: Communist party of America mass meetings; citizen protests against IWW activities
in Michigan; eviction of International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers organizers
from Grand Rapids, Michigan; American Protective League; DOJ cooperation with local
authorities; Socialist Labor party; DOJ raids; DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor;
alleged strike plans of miners in Minnesota and Michigan.
Frame
0747
0773
0776
0784
0931
1012
1023
1035
1037
1064
Section 24. Minnesota. 1917-1919.26pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; Thomas W. Gregory; Thomas C. Spelling; John Lind; Ambrose
Tighe.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of deportation cases in Minnesota and Arizona; citizen protests
against IWW activities; miners strikes; illegal liquor traffic; DOJ cooperation with state
authorities.
Section 25. Mississippi. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Citizen protest against IWW activities in Mississippi.
Section 26. Missouri. 1918-1923.8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in Missouri; alleged general strike plans; DOJ
prosecution of Wichita, Kansas, IWW defendants.
Section 27. Montana. 1917-1932.147pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; A. M. Briggs; Burton K. Wheeler; William C. Pitts; Thomas W.
Gregory.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Montana; habeas corpus proceedings; citizen
and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities; American Protective League; state
legislation relating to arson, sabotage, and criminal syndicalism during World War I; DOJ
investigation of IWW activities in coal and lumber industries.
Section 28. Nebraska. 1917-1919.81pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; Thomas W. Gregory; Frank Little; William D. Haywood; William C.
Pitts; Thomas S. Allen; George P. Vanderveer; Jane Street
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Nebraska; lynching of IWW executive board
member Frank Little in Butte, Montana; IWW union organization; attempted plea bargain with
IWW defendants; DOJ raid on IWW convention in Omaha; IWW publications; IWW
organization of domestic workers in Denver, Colorado, and Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Section 29. Nevada. 1917-1920.11pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW strikes in Tonopah, Nevada,
mining camps; wartime prosecution for unpatriotic remarks and utterances.
Section 31. New Jersey. 1917-1920.12pp.
People: L. A. Sterne.
Subjects: American Federation of Labor cooperation with DOJ investigation of IWW activities
in New Jersey; protests against IWW activities; IWW organization of metal and machinery
workers; U.S. Post Office Department censorship of mails.
Section 32. New Mexico. 1917.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in New Mexico.
Section 33. New York. 1917-1923.27pp.
People: Louis Ratnofsky; William D. Haywood; A. Mitchell Palmer; J. Edgar Hoover; Francis
Ralston Welsh; William C. Fitts; Charles W. Stockton.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities in New York; DOJ raids; New York Defense
Committee of the IWW; IWW publications; citizen protests against IWW activities; Wells
Fargo & Company cooperation witíi DOJ censorship; arrests of IWW organizers.
Section 33. Special Section, Bureau Papers Only. New York. 1920-1921.181pp.
People: L. J. Baley; George Hardy; J. Edgar Hoover; Charles Scully.
Subjects: Military Intelligence Division informant reports on industrial unrest and IWW
activities in New Yoric; strikes; union organization; mass meetings; publications; DOJ
investigation of IWW activities among immigrants at Ellis Island; IWW dissent with
Comintern; convention of Hungarian-speaking members of the IWW; private detective
agencies.
Frame
[IWW•By States] Casefile 186701 cont. [Pages omitted after Frame 0293 of Reel 4.]
1247
Section 13. Idaho. 1917.28pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: IWW publications; union organization.
Reel5
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[IWW•By States] Casefile 186701 cont.
0000
Section 34. North Carolina. 1919.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Citizen protests against IWW activities in North Carolina.
0004
Section 35. North Dakota. 1917-1923.14pp.
People: A. C. Townley; Kate Richards O'Hare.
Subjects: Citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW organization and strike plans of
agricultural workers in North Dakota; Farmers' Nonpartisan League of North Dakota.
0017
Section 35. Previously Restricted Materials. North Dakota. 1917.2pp. [Frames 0017 and 0018
are repeated.]
People: William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski.
Subject: Farmers' Nonpartisan League of North Dakota.
0018
Section 36. Ohio. 1917.7pp.
People: William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Ohio; protest against DOJ raids; private
detective agencies.
0025
Section 37. Oklahoma. 1917-1921.76pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; William C. Fitts; Thomas W. Gregory; John L. Metzen.
Subjects: Citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities in Oklahoma; DOJ
investigation and prosecution of IWW activities and pro-German matters in Oklahoma; IWW
General Defense Committee protest against events in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Bisbee, Arizona;
suppression of the Working Class Union in Oklahoma following alleged assassination attempt
by four black members upon Seminóle County officials.
0101
Section 38. Oregon. 1917-1918.129pp.
People: William C. Fitts; Elmer Sandstrom; William D. Haywood; Thomas W. Gregory; Henry
J. Weeks; Charles Warren.
Subjects: IWW organization of lumber workers; IWW protests against activities of the Loyal
Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen; state and federal suppression of IWW offices in Oregon;
IWW Official Membership Book and papers; censorship of IWW publications; wartime
shipbuilding and lumber worker strikes; citizen protests against IWW activities; arrest of IWW
members in Klamath Falls following acts of sabotage and antiwar activities; DOJ enforcement
of Espionage Act
0230
Section 39. Pennsylvania. 1917-1920.45pp.
People: Charles Recht; Francis Fisher Kane; Claude R. Porter; John Lord O'Brian; Alfred
Bettman.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Pennsylvania; IWW publications;
American Legion; request for return of IWW papers and property seized in DOJ raids in
Philadelphia; Military Intelligence Division and Naval Intelligence Division surveillance of
labor conditions in Pittsburgh; DOJ raids in Philadelphia and Scranton.
0275
Section 41. Rhode Island. 1917.9pp.
People: William C. Fitts.
Subjects: DOJ raids in Rhode Island; inventory of IWW and anarchist publications and papers
seized in raids.
*
Frame
0284
0292
0296
0309
0539
0799
Section 43. South Dakota. 1917.8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Citizen protests against arson and IWW activities in South Dakota; Agricultural
Workers Industrial Union of the IWW publications.
Section 44. Tennessee. 1920.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Request for information regarding DOJ investigation of IWW activities.
Section 45. Texas. 1917-1923.13pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Texas; IWW organization of MexicanAmericans.
Section 49, Part 1. Washington. 1917-1918.230pp.
People: William C. Fitts; Louis F. Post; Thomas W. Gregory; Frank K. Nebeker; Claude R.
Porter; John Lord O'Brian; Thomas Tracy; Charles Warren; Newton D. Baker; Henry J. Weeks;
Clarence L. Reames.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Labor cooperation with DOJ suppression of IWW activities in
Washington; IWW organization of immigrant labor, lumber workers, and agricultural workers;
citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities in Washington and Michigan;
Council of National Defense; The Minute Men of Seattle, Washington; DOJ censorship of
IWW publications; U.S. War Department cooperation with DOJ in prosecution of IWW
leadership; Arizona State Federation of Labor protest against events in Bis bee, Arizona; U.S.
Department of the Interior cooperation with DOJ investigations of IWW; mass meeting protest
against lynching of IWW executive board member Frank H. Little in Butte, Montana; Everett,
Washington, massacre of IWW members; Socialist party of Washington; DOJ cooperation with
state suppression of IWW; People's Council of America; Chamber of Commerce resolutions
urging legislation to suppress strikes and criminal syndicalism; conference of state and federal
prosecutors regarding IWW cases; use of state militia in quelling industrial disputes; proposed
declaration of martial law in Washington; arrest of IWW members in Klamath Falls, Oregon.
Section 49, Part 2. Washington. 1918.260pp.
People: Thomas W. Gregory; Clarence L. Reames; George F. Vanderveer; Fred Lowery;
Thomas J. Mooney; John Lord O'Brian; Claude R. Porter; A. S. Embree; William D. Haywood;
Vincent St. John; Josephus Daniels; William C. Fitts; Leonard Foster; S. B. Phelan.
Subjects: DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor in prosecution of IWW members
under immigration and deportation laws in Washington; habeas corpus proceedings; IWW
general strike plans; Military Intelligence Division surveillance of IWW; DOJ cooperation with
state prosecutions of IWW members; conference of state and federal prosecutors; protest
against California state prosecution of Mooney case; indictment of IWW leadership for
conspiracy to violate the neutrality laws; Seattle District Defense Committee of the IWW;
Bureau of Naval Intelligence cooperation with DOJ IWW investigations in Washington and
Alaska; IWW organization of lumber workers, cannery workers, and merchant marines; local
police department raid on IWW hall in Seattle; Bureau of Intelligence report on IWW activities
in Oregon; U.S. Army Department report on suppression of sedition and sabotage in the
Northwest; U.S. Post Office Department cooperation with DOJ in censorship of IWW
publications; indictment of IWW members for organizing among U.S. military forces; private
detective agencies; Employers' Association of Washington; citizen protests against IWW
activities
Section 49, Part 3. Washington. 1918-1929.100pp.
People: Harlan F. Stone; George F. Vanderveer; A. Mitchell Palmer; John Thomas Taylor; Ole
Hanson; Clarence L. Reames; Fred Lowery; William C. Redfield; John Lord O'Brian; Thomas
W. Gregory.
Subjects: IWW organization of lumber workers and cannery workers; protests against local
police suppression of IWW in Centralia, Washington; legal defense efforts; citizen and U.S.
congressman protests against IWW activities in Washington; American Legion; mass meetings;
Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen; IWW publications; state prosecution of IWW
members; U.S. Department of Commerce cooperation with DOJ investigations of immigrant
Frame
0899
0901
0932
labor in fisheries of Washington and Alaska; state legislation against criminal syndicalism; DOJ
cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor in the prosecution of immigration and deportation
cases; habeas corpus proceedings; alleged illegal arrests by officers of die Bureau of Naval
Intelligence.
Section 50. West Virginia. 1919.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Local prosecutor's request for DOJ investigation of IWW activities in coal mines.
Section 51. Wisconsin. 1914-1921.31pp.
People: John Lord O'Brian; Roy Brown; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Military Intelligence Division cooperation with Bureau of Investigation; citizen and
U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities in Wisconsin; Council of National Defense.
Section 52. Wyoming. 1918.5pp.
People: William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities in Wyoming; Council
of National Defense.
[IWW•Subjects] Casefile 186701
0937
Section 54. Frank Little matter. 1917-1920.12pp.
People: Frank Little; Burton K. Wheeler; Thomas W. Gregory.
Subjects: Local union, mass meeting, and citizen protests against lynching of IWW executive
board member Frank Little in Butte, Montana; Socialist party of America; alleged involvement
of military personnel in lynching of Frank Little.
0949
Section 55. IWW legislation. 1917.19pp.
People: William C. Fitts; Thomas W. Gregory.
Subjects: DOJ cooperation with U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee consideration of bills to
restrict IWW activities in the United States draft wartime legislation for public safety and
against sedition.
0968
Section 56. Nolan IWW case, Western District of Washington. 1917-1918. 32pp.
People: Thomas Nolan; E. A. Maison; Robert Solen; Thomas Tracy; Louise Olivereau; Frank
K. Nebeker; Claude R. Porter; Thomas W. Gregory; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Washington; IWW organization of lumber
workers; general strikes; alleged acts of sabotage.
1000
Section 57, Part 1. Sacramento, California, IWW cases. 1917-1921.147pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; George N. Murdock; John W. Preston; Thomas W. Gregory; William
C. Fitts; William D. Stephens; P. H. Johnson; Frederick H. Esmond; Theodora Pollok;
Woodrow W. Wilson; Frank K. Nebeker; Louis F. Post; Geoige F. Vanderveer.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Sacramento, California; protests against
treatment of IWW defendants in jail; assistant U.S. attorney's criticism of the governor of
California in the Sacramento Bee, alleging interference with IWW prosecutions; California
District Defense Committee of the IWW; DOJ prosecutions of IWW defendants in Wichita,
Kansas, and Chicago, Illinois; citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities.
Reel 6
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[IWW•Subjects] CaseHle 186701 cont.
0000
Section 57, Part 2. Sacramento, California, IWW cases. 1918-1919.240pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; Robert Duncan; Edward Anderson; John W. Preston; Thomas W.
Gregory; George N. Murdock; Elbert Coutts; Theodora Pollok; Charles M. Fickert; Francis
Ralston Welsh; Thomas J. Mooney; Frederick H. Esmond; John Lord O'Brian; Louise
Connolly; William C. Fitts; William Hood.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Sacramento, California; protests against
prosecution of Theodora Pollok; California District Defense Committee of the IWW;
indictment of William Hood, et al.
10
Frame
0240
0286
0356
0407
0536
0542
Section 57. Previously Restricted Materials. Sacramento, California, IWW cases. 1918-1921.
46pp.
People: Godfrey Ebel; Frederick H. Esmond; John Dymond; Mortimer Downing; Claude R.
Porter; George N. Murdock; Elbert Coutts; Charles M. Fickert; Edward Anderson; Theodora
Pollok; John W. Preston; P. H. Johnson; George F. Vanderveer; John Lord O'Brian; William E.
Cavanaugh; Clarence Darrow; J. B. McNamara; J. J. McNamara.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation reports regarding prosecution of IWW defendants in
Sacramento, California; protests against treatment of IWW defendants in jail; DOJ prosecution
of IWW defendants in Wichita, Kansas, and Chicago, Illinois; protests against prosecution of
Theodora Pollok; investigation of Espionage Act violations in Los Angeles, California; alleged
jury tampering by Clarence Darrow in the McNamara case.
Section 57, Part 3. Sacramento, California, IWW cases. 1919-1930.70pp.
People: William D. Mitchell; William F. Petersen; Frederick H. Esmond; Anna Kaufman;
Annette Abbott Adams; Roger N. Baldwin; Albert DeSilver; Harry M. Daugherty; James H.
Manning; Caroline A. Lowe; Joseph McCarty; Thomas J. Mooney; Edward Anderson; William
L. Frierson; Frank M. Silva; A. Mitchell Palmer; Joseph Harper; Godfrey Ebel; Alexander S.
Lanier; William D. Haywood; Roy Dempsey.
Subjects: Request for access to DOJ files regarding prosecution of IWW defendants in
Sacramento, California; release of insane prisoner from St. Elizabeth's Hospital; U.S.
Department of Labor cancellation of warrant for arrest of Frederick Esmond; ACLU; transfer of
insane prisoners from Leavenworth Penitentiary to St. Elizabeth's Hospital; U.S. Supreme
Court denial of writ of certiorari in case of Edward Anderson, et al.; DOJ cooperation with U.S.
Department of Labor in deportation and immigration cases; protests against conviction of IWW
defendants; General Defense Committee of the IWW; U.S. War Department censorship of mail
of prisoners.
Section 58. Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1918-1919.51pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; C. E. S. Wood; Louise Olivereau; Marie Equi; Anna Louise
Strong; John Lord O'Brian; Alfred Betunan; Clarence L. Reames; Harry Weinberger; Thomas
W. Gregory; Thomas Nolan.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Seattle, Washington, and St Michael, Alaska;
Espionage Act prosecutions; DOJ policies regarding clemency for IWW defendants;
surveillance and censorship of mail of IWW prisoners in the Colorado State Penitentiary.
Section 59. Sacramento, California, IWW cases. 1918-1919.129pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; Henry B. Twombly; Theodora Pollok; Claude R. Porter; Annette
Abbott Adams; William Kent; W. C. Coghlan; G. S. Arnold; Robert Scott; Alfred Bettman;
John W. Preston; Mortimer Downing; John Lord O'Brian; George M. La Monte; Louise
Connolly; Jeannette Rankin; Thomas W. Gregory; Joseph P. Tumulty; Simon J. Lubin; George
L. Bell; George N. Murdock; Woodrow W. Wilson; Robert Duncan; William C. Fitts; P. H.
Johnson.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Sacramento, California; protests against
prosecution of Theodora Pollok; DOJ policies regarding clemency for IWW defendants;
California District Defense Committee of the IWW.
Section 59. Previously Restricted Materials. Sacramento, California, IWW cases. 1918. 6pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; John W. Preston; Robert Duncan; George F. Vanderveer; George N.
Murdock; P. H. Johnson; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Sacramento, California; Bureau of
Investigation reports on progress of cases.
Section 60. Detroit, Michigan, IWW cases. 1917-1920.15pp.
People: E. C. Davison; William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski; Thomas W. Gregory; Arnold Petersen;
S. G. Bargery.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Detroit, Michigan; International Association
of Machinists complaints regarding seizure of local union records in DOJ raids; misuse of
search warrants in DOJ raids on Socialist Labor party offices in Detroit, Michigan, and
Columbus, Ohio.
11
Frame
0557
0602
0632
0634
0637
0639
0642
0649
0656
0661
0672
0679
0700
Section 60. Previously Restricted Materials. Detroit, Michigan, IWW cases. 1917-1918.45pp.
People: William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski; William D. Haywood; S. G. Bargery; Delmas C.
Stutler.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Detroit, Michigan; misuse of search warrants
in DOJ raids on Socialist Labor party offices in Detroit, Michigan, and Columbus, Ohio.
Section 61. Russian Consul at Seattle, Washington. 1917-1918. 30pp.
People: Fred H. Moore; Thomas W. Gregory; John Lord O'Brian; Frank L. Polk; William C.
Fitts; Hugh C. Wallace; Woodrow W. Wilson; George F. Vanderveer; M. E. Saville.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of Soviet Russian Consulate at Seattle, Washington; emigrants to
Soviet Russia; DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department of State regarding complaints against
activities of Soviet Russian Consulate at Seattle, Washington; IWW and pro-German activities
in the Pacific Northwest.
Section 61. Previously Restricted Materials. Russian Consul at Seattle, Washington. 1918.2pp.
People: John Lord O'Brian; A. B. Bielaski; William C. Fitts; Fred H. Moore.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of Soviet Russian Consulate at Seattle, Washington; emigrants to
Soviet Russia.
Section 62. Portland, Oregon, IWW case. 1918.3pp.
People: Emma Goldman; Alexander Berkman.
Subject: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Portland, Oregon.
Section 63. Fort Meade, Maryland, case. 1918.2pp.
People: Walter Mills Hinkte.
Subject: Protest regarding radical enroute to Soviet Russia as employee of the Young Men's
Christian Association.
Section 64. Roanoke, Virginia, case. 1918. 3pp.
People: William C. Fitts; Woodrow W. Wilson.
Subject: DOJ policy regarding prosecution of remarks made against President Wilson.
Section 65. Marshfield, Oregon, case. 1918.7pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Workers Socialist Publishing Company, Duluth, Minnesota, foreign language circulars
seized by U.S. Post Office Department in Marshfield, Oregon.
Section 66. Coeur d'Aleñe, Idaho, IWW case. 1918-1919.7pp.
People: Neil Guiney; William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Claude R. Porter.
Subject: DOJ receipt of transcript of evidence in Idaho state IWW prosecution.
Section 67. Sheffield, Alabama, IWW case. 1918.5pp.
People: William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski.
Subject: Citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities in Sheffield, Alabama.
Section 68. S. 4471, 65th Congress, 2nd Session. 1918.11pp.
People: William H. King; John Lord O'Brian.
Subjects: DOJ policy regarding wartime anti-IWW legislation before the U.S. Congress;
Espionage Act prosecutions.
Section 70. Salt Lake City, Utah, IWW case. 1919.7pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; Oscar W. Larson.
Subjects: DOJ policy regarding the release of literature seized in Military Intelligence Division
raids on IWW offices in Salt Lake City, Utah; mass meetings in Seattle, Washington.
Section 71. Tacoma and Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1919.21pp.
People: Robert C. Saunders; Claude R. Porter; Clarence L. Reames; A. Mitchell Palmer; Louis
F.Hart.
Subjects: DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor in immigration and deportation
cases; protests against IWW activities in Tacoma, Washington; wartime activities of the Bureau
of Investigation in Seattle, Washington; general strikes; planned IWW activities at the
Washington State Federation of Labor convention to be held in Bellingham, Washington.
Section 73. E. F. Doree. 1919. 5pp.
People: E. F. Doree; A. Mitchell Palmer.
Subject: Protest against planned IWW General Defense Committee fund raising meeting in
Devils Lake, North Dakota.
12
Frame
0705
0918
Section 74, Part 1. Centralia and Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1919.213pp.
People: A. Mitchell Palmer; Anna B. Field; William D. Haywood; Louis F. Hart; Robert C.
Saunders; Robert Scott; William B. Wilson; William Short; Samuel Gompers.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Centralia and Seattle, Washington;
veteran's organizations; Woman's International Union Label League; American Legion;
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States; Grand Army of the Republic; DOJ cooperation
with U.S. Department of Labor in immigration and deportation cases; DOJ prosecution of the
Seattle Union Record; general strikes; IWW infiltration of the American Federation of Labor in
the Pacific Northwest; protests against lynching of Wesley Everest in Centralia, Washington;
protests against DOJ raid on Seattle Union Record office; conference of state, local, and federal
prosecutors in Washington; DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Centralia, Washington;
U.S. Post Office Department censorship of publications.
Section 74, Part 2. Centralia and Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1919-1921.332pp.
People: Wesley Everest; E. T. Doran; William D. Haywood; George F. Vanderveer; Elmer S.
Smith; Robert C. Saunders; Alexander C. King; E. P. Ault; George P. Listman; F. A. Rust;
Anna Louise Strong; Joseph P. Tumulty; Charles D. Füllen; A. Mitchell Palmer; George
Williams; Sidney L. Gulick; Newton D. Baker; Josephus Daniels; Robert Scott; William Short;
Paul U. Kellogg; Robert Minor.
Subjects: Protests against lynching of Wesley Everest and anti-IWW activities in Centralia,
Washington; mass meetings; General Defense Committee and Northwest Defense Committee
of the IWW; DOJ cooperation with Washington state prosecution of IWW defendants in
Centralia, Washington; DOJ prosecution of the Seattle Union Record; Espionage Act
prosecutions; veteran's organizations; protests against IWW activities in Centralia, Washington;
requests for clemency in DOJ prosecution of Anna Louise Strong and other editors of the
Seattle Union Record; American Legion; decisions on demurrers and indictments in Seattle
Union Record cases; general strikes; Washington State Federation of Labor.
Reel 7
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[IWW•Subjects] Casefile 186701 cont.
0000
Section 74, Part 3. Centralia and Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1924-1925. 30pp.
People: William J. Donovan.
Subjects: Protests against Washington state prosecution of IWW defendants in Centralia,
Washington; requests for DOJ intervention and affidavits of jurors and witnesses in case;
American Legion; veteran's organizations.
0030
Section 75. IWW propaganda in Mexico. 1919.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: IWW propaganda and organization of coal miners in Coahuila, Mexico; U.S.
Department of State cooperation with DOJ.
0034
Section 76. Providence, Rhode Island. 1919. Ip.
People: n.a.
Subjects: n.a.
0035
Section 92. William Z. Foster. 1921.4pp.
People: Harry M. Daugherty; Willis F. McCook; William Z. Foster.
Subject: Protests against speaking tour of William Z. Foster.
0039
Section 103. Nicholas Radivoeff. 1921-1922.20pp.
People: Nicholas Radivoeff; James J. Davis; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Butte, Montana, habeas corpus proceedings; DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department
of Labor in immigration and deportation cases.
0059
Section 104. Joseph Yeager. 1920.8pp.
People: Joseph Yeager.
Subjects: Request for information regarding whereabouts of former IWW and Western
Federation Miners member from Arizona.
13
Frame
0067
0072
0076
0078
0089
0094
0096
0100
0130
0135
0141
0142
0143
Section 213. James Price. 1921.5pp.
People: James Price.
Subject: DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor in immigration and naturalization
cases.
Section 227. Simon J. Lubin. 1918.4pp.
People: Simon J. Lubin; Thomas W. Gregory; Woodrow W. Wilson; George L. Bell.
Subjects: State Commission of Immigration and Housing of California; requests for
investigation of IWW activities in California; Pacific Coast governors request for suppression
ofthelWW.
Section 237. E. T. Doran. 1921.2pp.
People: E. T. Doran.
Subject: Planned speaking engagement of E. T. Doran at Centralia, Washington.
Section 269. Ray Becker. 1926-1927.11pp.
People: Ray Becker; George F. Vanderveer.
Subjects: Protests against Washington State prosecution of IWW defendants in Centralia,
Washington; prison conditions at Walla Walla, Washington, state penitentiary; legal defense
efforts; General Defense Committee of the IWW; pen pals of prisoners; American Legion.
Section 276. Joe Dezelin. 1921. 5pp.
People: Joe Dezelin; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Protests against IWW activities in North Carolina; immigrant labor; labor agencies.
Section 319. Thomas Rimmer. 1921.2pp.
People: Thomas Rimmer.
Subjects: DOJ cooperation with U.S. Department of State; IWW activities in Butte, Montana.
Section 355. C. R. James. 1921.4pp.
People: C. R. James.
Subject: Protests against IWW activities among blacks in New York City.
Section 356. Railroad Travel Arrangements of IWW organizers in Washington. 1922.30pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Cooperation between railroad employees and IWW organizers in securing free travel
on freight trains in Washington; affidavits of hoboes regarding IWW organization of hoboes
and railroad employees; sale of IWW membership cards to riders of freight trains.
Section 357. G. Rudolph Bickert 1922. 5pp.
People: G. Rudolph Bickert
Subject: Request for ruling of DOJ on legality of IWW membership.
Section 358. IWW strike plans in California. 1923. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: IWW organization and strike plans among railroad employees in California.
Section 359. IWW strike plans in California and Texas. 1923.1pp. [file folder omitted]
People: n.a.
Subject: IWW organization and strike plans among railroad employees in California and Texas.
Section 359. Previously Restricted Materials. IWW strike plans in California and Texas. 1923.
Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: IWW organization and strike plans among railroad employees in California and Texas.
Section 360. IWW activities among U.S. Veterans' Bureau hospital employees in Arizona.
1923. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: IWW organization of U.S. Veterans' Bureau hospital employees in Arizona.
[IWW•By States•Enclosures] Enclosures to Casefile 186701
0148
Section 5. California. 1917. 5pp.
People: Frank K. Nebeker, J. Robert O'Connor; Thomas W. Gregory; John W. Preston
Subjects: Cooperation in DOJ prosecutions of IWW defendants in California and Chicago,
Illinois; immigrant labor in California; arson and acts of incendiarism in California.
14
Frame
0153
0158
0161
0163
0164
0165
0167
0173
0176
0208
0213
0215
0227
Section 6. Colorado. 1918-1919. 5pp.
People: Harry B. Tedrow; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation agents in Colorado; DOJ raids on IWW offices in Denver.
Section 15. Indiana. 1917-1927. 3pp.
People: George N. Murdock; A. B. Bielaski; J. Edgar Hoover; William J. Donovan.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation; coal mine operators; American Legion.
Section 17. Kansas. 1920.2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: DOJ policy regarding IWW publications; DOJ raids in Minnesota.
Section 19. Louisiana. 1920. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: DOJ investigations of IWW activities.
Section 21. Maryland. 1920. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Protests regarding IWW activities in Maryland.
Section 22. Massachusetts. 1917.2pp.
People: William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski; George W. Anderson.
Subjects: Private detective agencies; Bureau of Investigation.
Section 24. Minnesota. 1918-1920. 6pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Claude R. Porter.
Subjects: DOJ raids in Minnesota; IWW activities in Minnesota.
Section 26. Missouri. 1918. 3pp.
People: Claude R. Porter; A. B. Bielaski; William C. Fitts; George F. Vanderveer; Antone
Johanson; Frank P. Walsh.
Subjects: IWW organization of oil workers; Oil Workers Industrial Union; IWW publications;
DOJ raids; Bureau of Investigation; DOJ surveillance of mail of attorneys for IWW defendants.
Section 27. Montana. 1917-1921.32pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Benjamin H. Fletcher; George Hardy; Thomas W. Gregory; Burton
K. Wheeler; Frank Little.
Subjects: DOJ surveillance of IWW activities in Butte, Montana; mass meetings; industrial
unionism; organization of black Americans in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; emigrants to Soviet
Russia; IWW factionalism and internal politics; DOJ cooperation with local prosecutions of
IWW defendants; IWW organization of smelter workers, copper miners, coal miners, and
lumber workers in Montana; Finnish immigrants; citizen and U.S. congressman protests against
IWW activities in Montana; protests against lynching of IWW executive board member Frank
Little in Butte, Montana; strikes.
Section 28. Nebraska. 1918-1919. 5pp.
People: Claude R. Porter.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Nebraska and Kansas; Bureau of
Investigation.
Section 29. Nevada. 1917-1919.2pp.
People: A. B. Bielaski.
Subjects: IWW organization of miners in Nevada; strike plans.
Section 45. Texas. 1917-1923.12pp.
People: William J. Bums; Arthur Caminetti; J. Edgar Hoover; William C. Fitts; Thomas W.
Gregory; A. B. Bielaski.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation; DOJ cooperation with local prosecutions of IWW defendants
and seizures of IWW documents; DOJ cooperation with Military Intelligence Division; DOJ
investigation of IWW activities among immigrant labor in Texas; IWW organization of
shipyard workers, seamen, and oil workers in Texas, Oklahoma, and Mexico; protests against
enclosing of rangeland in Texas.
Section 46. Utah. 1917.2pp.
People: A. B. Bielaski; William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Grover H. Perry.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW activities among mine workers, smelter workers, railroad
workers, and agricultural workers in Utah and Arizona; strikes.
15
Frame
0229
0245
Section 49. Washington. 1917-1921.16pp.
People: L. J. Baley; George F. Vanderveer; J. Edgar Hoover; Alfred Bettman; A. B. Bielaski;
William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Military Intelligence Division cooperation with Bureau of Intelligence; list of IWW
organizers in New Mexico, Colorado, Texas, Arizona, and Idaho; Bureau of Investigation
surveillance of IWW activities in Washington and Montana; IWW publications; Italian
immigrants; IWW strike plans; antiwar activities; citizen protests against IWW activities among
lumber workers; travel of IWW members and hoboes on freight trains.
Section 51. Wisconsin. 1917. Ip.
People: William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski.
Subject: Antiwar propaganda in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
[IWW•Subjects•Enclosures] Enclosures to Casefile 186701
0246
Section 54. Frank Little matter. 1921. 2pp.
People: Frank Little.
Subject: Cover letters to photographs of body and warning placed on body after lynching öf
IWW executive board member Frank Little in Butte, Montana.
0248
Section 74, Part 1. Centralia and Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1919.2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; U.S. congressman protests against DOJ prosecution of
editors of the Seattle Union Record.
0250
Section 74, Part 2. Centralia and Seattle, Washington, IWW cases. 1920. Ip.
People: Alanson Sessions.
Subject: Bureau of Investigation memorandum regarding identity of Seattle Union Record
editor Alanson Sessions.
0251
Section 103. Nicholas Radivoeff. 1920. 36pp.
People: Nicholas Radivoeff; T. F. Nolan; A. S. Embree.
Subjects: Transcript of hearing of U.S. Department of Labor Immigration Service held in Butte,
Montana, in the cases of Nicholas Radivoeff and Adolphus Stewart Embree; testimony of
Bureau of Investigation special agent in case; deportations; immigrant labor; IWW
publications; private detective agencies; DOJ surveillance of IWW activities in Montana and
Idaho.
0287
Section 266, Special Section Bureau Papers Only. IWW Situation, San Francisco District 1921.
86pp.
People: Simon J. Lubin; J. Vance Thompson; Frederick H. Esmond.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation reports on surveillance of IWW activities in San Francisco,
California; Marine Transport Workers Union; California state criminal syndicalism laws and
raids on IWW union offices; IWW organization and publications; California District Defense
Committee of the IWW; fund raising and legal defense efforts; strike plans of Oil Workers
Industrial Union in California; mass meetings; United Communist party publications.
0373
Section 361. Werner Kauffeldt. 1923-1930. 6pp.
People: Werner Kauffeldt; Anna Lipton; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Informant's reports to the Bureau of Investigation on IWW activities and sabotage
plans of Anna Lipton in New York City; Marine Transport Workers Union in Maryland.
[Bisbee, Arizona, Deportations] Casefile 186813
0380
Section 1. 1917-1918. 355pp.
People: George W. P. Hunt; Thomas A. Flynn; William C. Fitts; John Lord O'Brian; Thomas
W. Gregory; Joseph P. Tumulty; John W. Davis; Samuel Gompers; William B. Wilson;
Woodrow W. Wilson; Frank K. Nebeker; Thomas E. Campbell; Harry C. Wheeler; Louis F.
Post; A. B. Bielaski; A. S. Embree; William C. Redfield; Charles Warren; Graver H. Perry;
Irwin St John Tucker; S. Burkhart; Abner E. Woodruff; Joseph Cannon; George L. Bell;
Emmett D. Boyle; Walter S. Gifford.
16
Frame
Subjects: Industrial disputes at copper mines in Globe and Miami, Arizona; IWW organization
and strike plans of mine workers in Arizona; Globe, Arizona, Home Guards; deplpyment of
federal troops in Arizona; U.S. War Department cooperation with DOJ; DOJ prosecution plans
and draft indictment of vigilantes and local officials involved in Bisbee, Arizona, deportations
of IWW members; citizen and U.S. congressman protests against IWW activities among lumber
workers in Arizona; summary of state laws regarding kidnapping; citizen and union protests
against deportations of IWW members from Bisbee, Arizona; U.S. Department of Labor
interest in case; President's Mediation Commission; Loyalty League of America, Bisbee,
Arizona; executive committee Bisbee Deportees; immigrant labor; U.S. War Department list
and histories of Bisbee, Arizona, IWW deportees held in Columbus, New Mexico; minutes of
conference of Thomas E. Campbell, governor of Arizona, with Citizens' Committee of Bisbee,
Arizona; lynching of IWW executive board member Frank Little in Butte, Montana; finances of
IWW locad union in Bisbee, Arizona; Socialist party of America; IWW publications; private
detective agencies; California Commission on Immigration and Housing; plan of governors of
Western states for dealing with labor problems and IWW activities; National Defense Council.
[Frames 0735-0872 are a partial duplication of Section 1.]
0873
Section 2.1918-1924.252pp.
People: Thomas A. Flynn; Harry M. Daugherty; Walter Nelles; A. Mitchell Palmer; Harry C.
Wheeler; Charles Evans Hughes; Alexander C. King; Wiley E. Jones; Claude R. Porter;
William C. Fitts; Thomas W. Gregory; George W. P. Hunt; William C. Herron; Thomas E.
Campbell.
Subjects: Citizen protests against IWW activities in Arizona; vigilantes; DOJ prosecution of
vigilantes and local officials involved in Bisbee, Arizona, deportations of IWW members;
President's Mediation Commission; union and citizen protests against Bisbee, Arizona,
deportations of IWW members; general strikes in Jerome, Globe, and Miami, Arizona; PhelpsDodge Corporation purchase of firearms used in Bisbee deputations; indictment and reply brief
in case against Harry C. Wheeler, et al; deployment of U.S. troops in Arizona mining centers.
1125
Section 2. Previously Restricted Materials. 1918.12pp.
People: A. B. Bielaski; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation report on conditions in Bisbee, Arizona, prior to deportations
of IWW members; strikes; vigilantes; U.S. Post Office Department censorship of IWW mail.
Reel 8
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[William D. Haywood] Casefile 188032
0001
Section 1, Part 1.1917-1918.199pp.
People: William D. Haywood; William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Claude R. Porter; Thomas
W. Gregory; Charles Page; Josephus Daniels; Charles F. Clyne; John Lord O'Brian; Roger N.
Baldwin; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Arturo Giovannitti; Carlo Tresca; Joseph Graber; Adolph
Germer; Joseph J. Ettor; Kenesaw M. Landis; Clarence L. Reames; Grover H. Perry; Samuel
Block; John L. Metzen; Charles Warren; Stanley J. Clark; Hinton Clabaugh.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; U.S.
Shipping Board; U.S. Navy Department; U.S. War Department; National Civil Liberties
Bureau; arrest of IWW defendants in case; IWW publications; citizen and U.S. congressman
protests against IWW activities; General Defense Committee of the IWW; DOJ raids on IWW
offices and seizure of IWW documents; citizen protests against DOJ prosecution of IWW
members and leadership; list of defendants in case; draft indictment in case against William D.
Haywood, et al.
0200
Section 1, Part 2 [Dates in Section 1, Part 2 correspond with those that would fall in Section 3
and so are presumed to be a misfile of Section 3.] 1918-1919.233pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Alexander C. King; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Arturo Giovannitti;
Carlo Tresca; Claude R. Porter; Charles F. Clyne; George F. Vanderveer; E. T. Doran; A. S.
Embree; Benjamin H. Fletcher; Jacob Friedrich; Charles Recht; Francis G. Caffey; Thomas W.
17
Frame
Gregory; Learned Hand; Frank K. Nebeker; John Lind; William C. Herrón; George N.
Murdock; William C. Fitts; Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: DOJ policies regarding the bail and parole of IWW defendants; DOJ Chicago,
Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; DOJ seizure of IWW documents;
General Defense Committee of the IWW; surveillance of mails of IWW members and IWW
lawyers; U.S. Post Office Department cooperation with DOJ; American Protective League
surveillance of IWW mailing procedures.
0433
Section 1. Previously Restricted Materials. 1917.32pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Thomas W. Gregory; Frank K. Nebeker; Carlton H. Parker;
George F. Vanderveer; William C. Fitts; Hinton Clabaugh; A. B. Bielaski; Fred Hardy; Stanley
J. Clark.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; IWW
fund raising and legal defense efforts; suggested method of arranging IWW evidence in case
against William D. Haywood, et al; DOJ wartime censorship of publications; sedition and
Espionage Act prosecutions; list of potential IWW detainees in the U.S.
0465
Section 2.1918. 396pp.
People: William D. Haywood; William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Claude R. Porter; Thomas
W. Gregory; Kenesaw M. Landis; Newton D. Baker; Richard T. Ely; A. B. Bielaski; Charles F.
Clyne; J. Robert O'Connor; Clarence L. Reames; George Andreytchine; Joseph J. Ettor; George
N. Murdock; W. H. Lamar; Francis G. Caffey; John P. Feeney; George Hardy; Josephus
Daniels; Joseph P. Tumulty; George F. Vanderveer; Roger N. Baldwin; Ralph M. Easley;
George Creel; William B. Wilson; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Cario Tresca; Arturo Giovannitti;
Woodrow W. Wilson; George P. West.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; citizen
protests against IWW activities and against DOJ prosecution of IWW members; IWW
publications; U.S. War Department and U.S. Navy Department cooperation with DOJ;
Espionage Act prosecutions; answer to petition for return of papers and petition for impounding
order in case against William D. Haywood, et al; affidavit as to documents seized by DOJ and
lists of IWW documents and publications in storage in case against William D. Haywood, et al;
U.S. Post Office Department cooperation with DOJ in censorship of IWW publications;
General Defense Committee of the IWW; League for National Unity.
0861
Section 2. Enclosures. 1918.12pp.
People: William D. Haywood; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; special
report regarding IWW activities in Portland, Oregon; IWW union organization; Espionage Act
Prosecutions; Soviet Russian consulate in Seattle, Washington.
[For possible misfile of Section 3, see Section 1, Part 2.]
0873
Section 4.1918-1919.263pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Charles F. Clyne; A. Mitchell Palmer; Claude R. Porter; Vincent
St. John; Clarence Darrow; Raymond S. Fanning; George N. Murdock; Kenesaw M. Landis;
George F. Vanderveer; Frank K. Nebeker; Francis G. Caffey; Harry Weinberger; George
Andreytchine; John Lord O'Brian; Alexander C. King; David S. Cook; Louis F. Post; Charles
Recht; Arturo Giovannitti; Alexander S. Lanier; Charles Ashleigh; Herman Richter; George W.
Whiteside; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Carlo Tresca; Thomas W. Gregory; Alfred Bettman.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; citizen
protests against IWW activities and against DOJ prosecution of IWW members; IWW
organization of black Americans; list of defendants released on bond; charge of Judge Landis to
the jury in case against William D. Haywood, et al; DOJ policies regarding bail and parole for
IWW defendants; U.S. War Department cooperation with DOJ; plans for disposition of IWW
documents and property seized by DOJ.
1136
Section 5. 1919-1920.248pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Charles F. Clyne; David S. Cook; Robert P. Stewart; Frank K.
Nebeker; A. Mitchell Palmer; George Andreytchine; Louis F. Post; Claude R. Porter; John L.
Metzen.
18
Frame
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; citizen and U.S.
congressman protests against IWW activities; IWW publications; General Defense Committee
of the IWW; International Workers' Defense League; DOJ policies regarding bail and parole
for IWW defendants; plans foe disposition of IWW documents and property seized by the DOJ.
Reel 9
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[William D. Haywood] Casefile 188032 cont.
0000
Section 5. Previously Restricted Materials and Enclosures. 1918-1919.24pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Frank K. Nebeker; J. Edgar Hoover; Charles H. McKinnon; A.
Mitchell Palmer; Benjamin H. Fletcher; A. B. Bielaski; George N. Murdock.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; plans for
disposition of documents and property seized by the DOJ; IWW publications; citizen and U.S.
congressman protests against IWW activities; private detective agencies; U.S. Post Office
Department censorship of IWW mail.
0024
Section 6.1920-1938.213pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Arturo Giovannitti; J. Edgar Hoover; Homer S. Cummings;
Joseph B. Fleming; Victor L. Berger; Forrest Edwards; Vincent St. John; Raymond S. Fanning;
A. Mitchell Palmer; William L. Frierson; Francis Ralston Welsh; James H. Rowan; Louis F.
Post; Frank K. Nebeker; David S. Cook.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; requests
for access to DOJ files on case against William D. Haywood, et al; DOJ request for U.S.
Department of State verification of death of William D. Haywood in Russia; application for
writ of certiorari before the U.S. Supreme Court; U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals hearings;
surveillance of mail of prisoners in Leavenworth, Kansas, penitentiary; General Defense
Committee of the IWW; DOJ policies regarding parole and bail for IWW defendants; IWW
fund raising, legal defense, and organization of agricultural workers in South Dakota; citizen
protests against IWW activities and against DOJ prosecution of IWW members; IWW
publications; plans for disposition of IWW documents and property seized by the DOJ.
0237
Section 7.1921-1954.205pp.
People: William D. Haywood; William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Thomas J. D. Salter;
Samuel Gompers; J. Edgar Hoover; Harry M. Daugherty; Charles Moyer; Mabel Walker
Willebrandt; Ralph Chaplin; Roger N. Baldwin; James A. Finch; Sara B. Field; Ida Palmer; E.
F. Doree; Stanley J. Clark; Alexander S. Lanier; Rose Weiss; Harry Weinberger; Charles
Ashleigh; Vincent St. John; Charles F. Clyne; John Pancner; Caroline A. Lowe; Robert P.
Stewart; Joseph B. Fleming; Annette Abbott Adams.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; requests
for access to DOJ files on case against William D. Haywood, et al; plans for disposition of
IWW documents seized by the DOJ; decision of U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in case against
William D. Haywood, et al; dismissal of cases against remaining defendants; citizen protests
against IWW activities and against DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants; surveillance of mail
of prisoners in Leavenworth, Kansas, penitentiary; General Defense Committee of the IWW;
ACLU; forfeiture of bond by William D. Haywood; interview from Pravda given by William
D. Haywood in Moscow regarding the present condition of the labor classes in the United
States; U.S. Supreme Court denial of writ of certiorari in case against William D. Haywood,
etal.
0442
Section 6-7. Previously Restricted Materials and Enclosures. 1928-1955.82pp.
People: William D. Haywood; Herbert McCutcheon; Vincent St. John; William Stanley; J.
Edgar Hoover; William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Charles F. Clyne.
19
Frame
0524
0544
0558
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; dismissal
of charges against fugitive IWW defendant Herbert McCutcheon; decision of U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals in case against William D. Haywood, et al; investigation of death of William D.
Hay wood in Moscow, Russia; copy of original indictment in case against William D. Haywood,
et al; attempted extradition of conspiracy defendants from Canada.
Special Section. 1917-1918.20pp.
People: William D. Haywood; William C. Fitts; Thomas W. Gregory; George F. Vanderveer;
George Creel; Frank K. Nebeker; Lincoln Steffens; M. E. Saville.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members;
Committee on Public Information; IWW activities in the Pacific Northwest; IWW legal defense
efforts.
Special Section. Enclosures and Previously Restricted Materials. 1917-1918.14pp.
People: William D. Haywood; A. B. Bielaski; Antone Johanson; Frank P. Walsh; George F.
Vanderveer; Fred Hardy; Hinton Clabaugh; Roger N. Baldwin; J. A. Wagner.
Subjects: IWW activities in the Pacific Northwest; IWW legal defense efforts; Office of Naval
Intelligence surveillance of mail of IWW attorneys; Soviet Russian consulate in Seattle,
Washington; Civil Liberties Bureau of the American Union against Militarism and the
formation of the ACLU or National Civil Liberties Bureau; American visitors to Soviet Russia.
File regarding White E. Gibson, Special Assistant to the Attorney General. 1918.125pp.
People: William D. Haywood; White E. Gibson; Thomas W. Gregory; Kenesaw M. Landis;
William C. Fitts; Frank K. Nebeker; Claude R. Porter; Simon J. Lubin; George F. Vanderveer;
George L. Bell; Samuel Gompers; Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: DOJ Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW leadership and IWW members; Butte,
Montana, miners strike and acts of incendiarism at Granite Mountain, Montana; attempts to
establish overt acts of sabotage by the IWW for the prosecution; investigation of IWW
activities on the Pacific Coast; IWW lumber workers strike and union organization; eight-hour
day proposal; National Civic Federation.
[F. W. Henshaw] Casefile 188044
0684
1917.66pp.
People: F. W. Henshaw; Frank K. Nebeker; Thomas W. Gregory; William C. Fitts; J. C.
Thompson; Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Charles M. Fickert; John W. Preston; A. B.
Bielaski.
Subjects: Supreme Court of California Justice F. W. Henshaw allegations regarding IWW
activities in California; investigation of explosion at Mare Island, California, Navy Yard;
Mooney-Billings case; district attorney for the city and county of San Francisco, California,
public relations activities; International Workers' Defense League; U.S. Department of Labor
cooperation with DOJ; immigration and naturalization cases.
[Fresno, California, IWW Case] Casefile 188561
0750
1917-1922. 113pp.
People: Annette Abbott Adams; J. Edgar Hoover; Claude R. Porter; Elmo- Anderson; J. Robert
O'Connor; John W. Preston; Thomas W. Gregory; William C. Fitts.
Subjects: Prison conditions at Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary; partial transcript of
trial and indictment in case against Elmer Anderson, et al; DOJ prosecution of Fresno and
Sacramento, California, IWW defendants and Chicago, Illinois, prosecution of IWW
leadership; IWW organization of agricultural workers and acts of sabotage in California.
[C. W. Anderson, et al.] Casefile 189152
0863
Section 1.1917-1919.267pp.
People: C. W. Anderson; Albert DeSilver; Claude R. Porter; Fred Robertson; Thomas W.
Gregory; John Lord O'Brian; George N. Murdock; George F. Vanderveer; Oliver E. Pagan;
Frank K. Nebeker; William C. Fitts; A. B. Bielaski; Charles F. Clyne.
20
Frame
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Wichita, Kansas; investigation of IWW
organization of oil field workers and agricultural workers; IWW publications; National Civil
Liberties Bureau; DOJ policies regarding bail for IWW defendants; U.S. War Department
cooperation with DOJ; indictment and complaint in case against C. W. Anderson, et at
internment of aliens during World War I.
Reel 10
RG 60•Straight Numerical File cont.
[C. W. Anderson, et al.] Cásente 189152 cont.
0000
Section 2.1919.201pp.
People: C. W. Anderson; A. Mitchell Palmer; Fred Robertson; Claude R. Porter; Oliver E.
Pagan; John C. Pollock; George F. Vanderveer; Albert DeSilver; William C. Herron; John Lord
O'Brian; Alfred Betunan; William L. Frierson.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Wichita, Kansas; citizen protests against DOJ
prosecution of IWW defendants; decision and order of Judge Pollock regarding the return of
IWW documents seized by the DOJ, indictment, petition for return of papers, and motion to
quash indictment, demurrer, and motion for bill of particulars in case against C. W. Anderson,
et ak IWW organization of oil field workers and agricultural workers; IWW publications; IWW
legal defense efforts; DOJ raids in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Minnesota; National Civil Liberties
Bureau; DOJ policies regarding bail for IWW defendants; prison conditions of IWW prisoners
held in the county jails of Kansas.
0201
Section 3. 1919-1921. 235pp.
People: C. W. Anderson; James M. Beck; Harry M. Daugherty; Fred Robertson; Robert P.
Stewart; F. W. Galbraith, Jr.; Annette Abbott Adams; Samuel B. Amidon; George F.
Vanderveer; A. Mitchell Palmer; Fred H. Moore; Caroline A. Lowe; J. Edgar Hoover; John C.
Pollock; John H. Atwood; Frank J. Silsbee; Louis F. Post; Alexander Howat.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Wichita, Kansas; U.S. Supreme Court denial
of writ of certiorari, U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision, motion for severance, and ruling of
Judge Pollock on motion to quash indictment in case against C. W. Anderson, et at American
Legion; internment of aliens during World War I; IWW publications; IWW organization of oil
field workers and agricultural workers; IWW legal defense efforts; U.S. Department of Labor
cooperation with DOJ; union protests against DOJ prosecution of IWW members.
0436
Section 2 and Section 3. Previously Restricted Materials. 21pp.
People: C. W. Anderson; J. Edgar Hoover; Claude R. Porter.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Wichita, Kansas; Bureau of Investigation.
[Spokane, Washington] Casefile 189738
0457
1917-1918.13pp.
People: Thomas W. Gregory; John Lord O'Brian; A. B. Bielaski; Claude R. Porter; William C.
Fitts.
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Spokane, Washington; IWW strikes; private
detective agencies.
[Seattle, Washington] Casefile 193498
0470
1918-1919.29pp.
People: Thomas W. Gregory; Robert C. Saunders; Clarence L. Reames; Claude R. Porter; John
Lord O'Brian.
Subjects: Alleged illegal arrests and false imprisonment of IWW members by special agents of
the DOJ, U.S. Navy personnel, and local officials in Seattle, Washington; Office of Naval
Intelligence; Seattle District Defense Committee and General Defense Committee of the IWW.
21
Frame
[Butte, Montana] Casefile 195397
0499
Section 1.1918-1920.143pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Baldwin Robertson; A. Mitchell Palmer; Edward C. Day; S. V.
Stewart; Burton K. Wheeler; Robert P. Stewart; John Lord O'Brian; Victor Elting; Thomas W.
Gregory; Newton D. Baker; A. B. Bielaski.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW and radical activities in Montana; citizen and U.S.
congressman protests against Butte, Montana, Daily Bulletin editorials regarding IWW union
organization, violence in labor disputes, and free speech; use of U.S. Guards in Butte, Montana,
labor disputes; Espionage Act prosecutions; general strikes; American Protective League;
governor of Montana requests for federal intervention in Butte, Montana; private detective
agencies; U.S. War Department cooperation with DOJ; alleged illegal arrests and false
imprisonments by U.S. Guards and local officials in Butte, Montana.
0642
Section 1. Previously Restricted Materials. 1918-1920.69pp.
People: Baldwin Robertson; J. Edgar Hoover; A. Mitchell Palmer; A. B. Bielaski.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW and radical activities in Montana; citizen protests against
editorials and state prosecution of editors of the Butte, Montana, Daily Bulletin; American
Loyalty League; general strikes; use of U.S. Guards in Butte, Montana, labor disputes; alleged
illegal arrests and false imprisonments by U.S. Guards and local officials in Butte, Montana.
0711
Section 2.1920. 56pp.
People: Baldwin Robertson; A. Mitchell Palmer.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW and radical activities in Montana; contempt of court and
improper use of mail charges brought against editors of the Butte, Montana, Daily Bulletin;
private detective agencies; violence in labor disputes; immigration and deportation cases.
0767
Section 2. Previously Restricted Materials. 1920.45pp.
People: Baldwin Robertson; Robert P. Stewart; J. Edgar Hoover; A. S. Embree; Nicholas
Radivoeff.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW and radical activities in Montana; immigration and
deportation cases; investigation and prosecution of Butte, Montana, Daily Bulletin editorials
and use of mail; U.S. Post Office Department cooperation with DOJ; Bureau of Investigation
report on IWW activities in Butte, Montana.
0812
Subsection 1.1920. 52pp.
People: Baldwin Robertson; A. Mitchell Palmer; Frank K. Nebeker; Robert P. Stewart; J. Edgar
Hoover; Louis F. Post; William L. Frierson.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW and radical activities in Montana; Espionage Act
prosecutions; Butte, Montana, Daily Bulletin; American Legion; U.S. Department of Labor
cooperation with DOJ.
0864
Subsection 2.1920. 6pp.
People: Baldwin Robertson.
Subjects: DOJ investigation of IWW and radical activities in Montana; alleged false affidavits
made by managing editor of the Butte, Montana, Daily Bulletin.
[James H. Rowan] Casefile 210791
0870
1920-1927. 178pp.
People: James H. Rowan; Oscar R. Luhring; John G. Sargent; Charles F. Clyne; Roy C. Fox;
John Marshall; J. Edgar Hoover; Donald F. Kizer; Edwin A. Olson; Roy A. Darling; H. S.
Ridgely; Henry S. Huntington; Harlan F. Stone; Frank R. Jeffrey; Harry M. Daugherty; William
C. Herron; Robert P. Stewart; Theodore G. Risley; Annette Abbott Adams; Louis F. Post; T. J.
Spellacy.
Subjects: Naturalization and immigration case involving convicted IWW leader, whose
sentence had been commuted; U.S. Department of Labor cooperation with DOJ; decision of
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturning decree cancelling certificate of naturalization; citizen
and U.S. congressman protests against cancellation of citizenship of James H. Rowan.
22
Frame
Reel 11
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files
Charles Ashleigh Casefile 35-362
0001
1919-1922.393pp.
People: Charles Ashleigh; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; James A. Finch; Harry
Weinberger; George B. Christian, Jr.; Frank K. Nebeker; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Alexander S.
Lanier; Mary Heaton Vorse; Robert H. Turner; Charles F. Clyne; A. Mitchell Palmer;
Woodrow W. Wilson; Frank L. Polk.
Subjects: Application for executive clemency in behalf of Charles Ashleigh; appeals, reports,
and exhibits supporting applications; Workers' Defense Union; DOJ recommendations
regarding executive clemency for IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal
penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW prisoners; deportations; amnesty proposals in the U.S.
Congress; amnesty laws in England, Canada, Italy, Belgium, and France; Espionage Act
convictions; IWW publications.
Carl Ahlteen, Ragner Johanson, and Sigfried Stenberg Casefile 36-52
0394
1921-1933.293pp.
People: Carl Ahlteen; Ragner Johanson; Sigfried Stenberg; James A. Finch; Lucille B. Milner;
Harry M. Daugherty; Rogo- N. Baldwin; Charles Evans Hughes; Axel Wallenberg; A. Mitchell
Palmer; Charles F. Clyne; Robert H. Turner; John Lord O'Brian; Morris L. Ernst; Arthur
Garfield Hays; William D. Mitchell; Herbert C. Hoover; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Warren G.
Harding; Mary Gertrude Fendall.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency in behalf of Carl Ahlteen, Ragner Johanson, and
Sigfried Stenberg; appeals, repots, and exhibits supporting applications; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas,
federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW prisoners; deportations; ACLU; IWW
publications; Espionage Act convictions; amnesty proposals in the U.S. Congress; Joint
Amnesty Committee.
So-called Political Prisoner Cases [No Casefile Number]
0686
1921-1923.75pp.
People: Vincent St John.
Subjects: DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency fot IWW prisoners; general
amnesty proposals in the United States and abroad; lists of IWW prisoners in the United States
and summaries of cases; Espionage Act convictions.
Charles L. Lambert, Sam Scarlett, and Aurelio V. Azuara Casefile 38-487
0761
1921-1923.284pp.
People: Charles L. Lambert; Sam Scarlett; Aurelio V. Azuara; Archibald R. Sinclair; Harry M.
Daugherty; Warren G. Harding; James A. Finch; Charles F. Clyne; John Lord O'Brian; Newton
D. Baker; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Mary Gertrude Fendall.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of Charles L. Lambert, Sam Scarlett,
and Aurelio V. Azuara; appeals, reports, and exhibits supporting applications; DOJ
recommendations regarding executive clemency far IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth,
Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW prisoners; deportations; general
amnesty proposals; Joint Amnesty Committee; ACLU; lists of IWW prisoners in the United
States with summaries of cases; IWW publications and union organization; Espionage Act
convictions.
23
Frame
Reel 12
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Chicago, Illinois, IWW Casefile 39-240
0001
General. 1921-1924.276pp.
People: Harry M. Daugherty; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Newton D. Baker; Warren F. Martin;
Mary Gertrude Fendall; John C. Pollock; Edward Anderson; C. W. Anderson; Eimer Anderson;
James A. Finch; Augustus T. Seymour; E. J. Henning; Harry F. Ward; Roger N. Baldwin;
Charles F. Clyne; Claude R. Porter; Pierce C. Wetter.
Subjects: General amnesty proposals; Espionage Act convictions; lists of IWW prisoners in the
United States with summaries of cases; applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW
prisoners in the United States with summaries of cases; Joint Amnesty Committee; ACLU;
appeals, reports, and exhibits supporting applications; DOJ recommendations regarding
executive clemency for IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary
regarding behavior of IWW prisoners; deportations; partial transcript on appeal of case against
Edward Anderson, et al; IWW publications; Wichita, Kansas, and Sacramento, California,
IWW cases; General Defense Committee of the IWW.
0277
(A). Charles Bennett. 1921-1929.26pp.
People: Charles Bennett; George Wharton Pepper; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; general amnesty proposals in the United States; Espionage Act convictions.
0303
(B). G. J. Bouig. 1922-1925.20pp.
People: G. J. Bourg; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; Charles F. Clyne.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency in behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; deportations; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency
for IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior
of IWW prisoners.
0323
(C). Richard Brazier. 1922-1925.47pp.
People: Richard Brazier; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; Charles F. Clyne; Pierce C.
Wetter; William E. Borah.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; deportations; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency
for IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior
of IWW prisoners; Sacramento, California, IWW convictions; New York branch office of the
General Defense Committee.
0370
(D). Ralph Chaplin. 1922-1923.24pp.
People: Ralph Chaplin; James A. Finch; Robert T. Kerlin; Warren G. Harding; Mabel Walker
Willebrandt; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency in behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; censorship of mail of IWW prisoners at Leavenworth, Kansas, federal
penitentiary; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW {»isoners; reports
from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW prisoners.
0394
(E). Alexander Coumos. 1923. 10pp.
People: Alexander Coumos.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency in behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
24
Frame
0404
0414
0421
0426
0434
0439
0451
0458
0466
(F). C. W. Davis. 1923.10pp.
People: C. W. Davis; C. H. Rice.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(G). J. T. Doran. 1923.7pp.
People: J. T. Doran.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(H). Forrest Edwards. 1923.5pp.
People: Forrest Edwards.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(I). John Foss. 1923. 8pp.
People: John Foss.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(J). Joe Graber. 1923. 5pp.
People: Joe Graber.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(K). Peter Green. 1922-1923.12pp.
People: Peter Green; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; Charles F. Clyne.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(L). H. F. Kane. 1923.7pp.
People: H. F. Kane; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisonos; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners and censorship of mail.
(M). Harry Lloyd. 1923-1925.8pp.
People: Harry Lloyd; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; deportations; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding
behavior of IWW prisoners.
(N). Burt Lorton. 1922-1925.12pp.
People: Burt Lorton; James A. Finch; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; deportations; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding
behavior of IWW prisoners.
25
Frame
0478
0484
0491
0500
0507
0547
0563
0572
0580
(O). J. A. MacDonald. 1923. 6pp.
People: i. A. MacDonald.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(P). Charles H. McKinnon. 1923.7pp.
People: Charles H. McKinnon; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(Q). James Rowan. 1923.9pp.
People: James Rowan; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency an behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners and censorship of mail.
(R). Don Sheridan. 1923.7pp.
People: Don Sheridan.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency cm behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(S). Archie Sinclair. 1922-1923.40pp.
People: Archie Sinclair; William J. Bums; James A. Finch; Pierce C. Wetter; Augustus T.
Seymour; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; Robe Carl White.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; deportations; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding
behavior of IWW prisoners.
(T). James Slovick. 1923-1944. 16pp.
People: James Slovick; Roger N. Baldwin; Daniel M. Lyons; Isaac Shorr.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; ACLU; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for
IWW prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of
IWW prisoners.
(U). James P. Thompson. 1923.9pp.
People: James P. Thompson; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
(V). John L. Turner. 1923. 8pp.
People: John L. Turner.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Political Prisoners. Haywood Case. 1920-1923. 337pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Harry M. Daugherty; James A. Finch; Charles F. Clyne; Albert DeSilver; Moris
Hillquit; William D. Haywood.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; lists of IWW prisoners and summaries of cases; foreign and domestic precedents fat
26
Frame
0917
a decree of general amnesty for political prisoners; partial transcript of trial on appeal in case
against William D. Haywood, et al.
(S). Archie Sinclair. Previously Restricted Materials. 1923.28pp.
People: Archie Sinclair; Charlotte Anita Whitney.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation reports regarding IWW activities in San Francisco,
California; union organization; state criminal syndicalism laws; IWW fund raising and legal
defense efforts.
Reel 13
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Sacramento, California, IWW Casefile 39-241
0001
General. 1920-1923.353pp. [fde folder omitted]
People: James A. Finch; Elmer Anderson; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; A.
Mitchell Palmer; Robert P. Stewart; Mary Gertrude Fendall; Harry M. Daugherty; (John)
Calvin Coolidge; Newton D. Baker; Robert H. Turner; Ralph M. Easley; John W. Preston;
Robert Duncan; Archibald Stevenson; Frank H. Rudkin; Frank M. Silva; Anna C. Pollok;
Theodora Pollok Rhoads; Charles M. Fickert; Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; Gilson
Gardner; George Wharton Pepper; Elbert Coutts; Edward Anderson.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leaven worth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; Joint Amnesty Committee; ACLU; National Civic Federation; IWW publications and
legal defense efforts; district attorney for the city and county of San Francisco, California;
citizen protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners.
0354
Elmer Anderson. 1923.7pp.
People: Elmer Anderson; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
0361
Pete De Bemardi. 1920-1923.27pp.
People: Pete De Bemardi; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch; Roger
N. Baldwin; John W. Preston; (John) Calvin Coolidge.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; ACLU.
0388
Harry Brewer. 1923.13pp.
People: Harry Brewer; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
0401
William Hood 1920-1923.17pp.
People: William Hood; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
27
Frame
0418
0436
0452
0470
0488
0516
0531
0546
Robert Connellan. 1920-1933.18pp.
People: Robert Connellan; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch; (John)
Calvin Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Mortimer Downing. 1920-1923.16pp.
People: Mortimer Downing; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin
Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Harry Gray. 1920-1923.18pp.
People: Harry Gray; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Harry
M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
John Grave. 1920-1923. 18pp.
People: John Grave; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Harry
M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Henry Hammer. 1920-1923. 28pp.
People: Henry Hammer; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; Frank B. Kellogg; Harry
M. Daugherty; (John) Calvin Coolidge.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; citizen protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners.
Frank Elliott. 1923.15pp.
People: Frank Elliott; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Chris A. Luber. 1923. 15pp.
People: Chris A. Luber; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Phil McLaughlin. 1923.22pp.
People: Phil McLaughlin; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; citizen protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners; reports from
Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW prisoners.
28
Frame
0568
0582
0598
0683
0690
0704
0737
0750
George O'ConneU. 1920-1923.14pp.
People: George O'ConneU; Warren G. Haiding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin
Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
John Potthast 1920-1923.16pp.
People: John Potthast; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Edward Quigley. 1922-1923.85pp.
People: Edward Quigley; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch; Mary
Gertrude Fendall; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty; William J. Bums.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; citizen protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners; Joint Amnesty
Committee; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of
IWW prisoners.
Edward Quigley. Previously Restricted Materials. 1922-1923.7pp.
People: Edward Quigley; William J. Bums; Harry Weinberger.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation reports on physicians qualified to examine IWW prisoners;
Joint Amnesty Committee; Socialist party of America.
James Quinlan. 1920-1923.14pp.
People: James Quinlan; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Vincent SantiUi. 1920-1924.34pp.
People: Vincent SantiUi; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch; Harry M.
Daugherty; (John) Calvin Coolidge.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency cm behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; deportations.
Myron Sprague. 1920-1923.13pp.
People: Myron Sprague; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regardingexecutive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Caesar Tabib. 1922-1923.101pp.
People: Caesar Tabib; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; Mary Gertrude Fendall;
Frank H. Rudkin; Robert Duncan; George B. Christian, Jr.; Harry M. Daugherty; William J.
Bums; Roger N. Baldwin; (John) Calvin Coolidge.
29
Frame
08S1
0856
0875
0892
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior and
censorship of mail of IWW prisoners; ACLU; citizen protests against continued incarceration of
IWW prisoners; Joint Amnesty Committee; Workers National Prison Comfort Club.
Caesar Tabib. Previously Restricted Materials. 1921-1922.5pp.
People: Caesar Tabib; Roger N. Baldwin; Alexander S. Lanier.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation reports on physicians qualified to examine IWW prisoners;
Joint Amnesty Committee; citizen protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners;
ACLU.
Jacob Twi. 1920-1924.19pp.
People: Jacob Ton; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; Alexander S. Lanier; Harry M.
Daugherty; (John) Calvin Coolidge.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior and
censorship of mail of IWW prisoners; deportations.
George F. Voetter. 1920-1923.17pp.
People: George F. Voetter; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; (John) Calvin Coolidge;
Harry M. Daugherty.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
James Price. 1922-1924.90pp.
People: James Price; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Augustus T. Seymour; Earl J. Davis; James A.
Finch; Robert Duncan; Mary Gertrude Fendall; Warren F. Martin; Harry M. Daugherty; Harry
Feinberg.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; citizen protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners; Joint Amnesty
Committee; IWW publications; California state criminal syndicalism law convictions; General
Defense Committee.
Reel 14
RD 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont.
Sacramento, California, IWW Caseffle 39-241 cont
0001
Roy P. Connor. 1920-1923.154pp.
People: Roy P. Connor; Warren G. Harding; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch; Roger N.
Baldwin; Newton D. Baker; Thomas W. Hardwick; Harry M. Daugherty; (John) Calvin
Coolidge; Clifford Walker; Thomas W. Hardwick; Robert Duncan; John W. Preston; Frank H.
Rudkin; George Wharton Pepper; William E. Borah.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior and
censorship of mail of IWW prisoners; citizen and U.S. congressman protests against continued
incarceration of IWW prisoners; ACLU; hunger strikes.
0155
IWW•Sacramento. 1918-1923.234pp. [file folder omitted]
People: George Wharton Pepper; Augustus T. Seymour; James A. Finch; Frank M. Silva;
Robert Duncan; John W. Preston; P. H. Johnson; William D. Stephens; Charles M. Fickert;
Thomas J. Mooney; Warren K. Billings; F. W. Henshaw; Harry M. Daugherty; Augustus T.
Seymour; Mary Gertrude Fendall.
30
Frame
0389
0501
:<
Subjects: DOJ prosecution of IWW defendants in Sacramento, California, and Chicago, Illinois,
and recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW defendants; citizen and U.S.
congressman protests against continued incarceration of IWW prisoners; ACLU publications
regarding IWW cases; Mooney-Billings case; district attorney for the city and county of San
Francisco, California; Joint Amnesty Committee.
IWW•Sacramento. Previously Restricted Materials.. 1922-1974.112pp.
People: Richard S. Street; James A. Finch; William J. Bums.
Subjects: Request for access to DOJ files regarding Sacramento, California, IWW prosecutions;
DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW prisoners; Bureau of
Investigation reports on executive clemency for IWW prisoners.
General. 1922-1923.23pp. [file folder omitted]
People: n.a.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners.
Wichita, Kansas, IWW Casefile 39-242
0524
Wichita. 1920-1923.88pp. [file folder omitted]
People: C. W. Anderson; Fred Robertson; Hendrik Shipstead; Knute Nelson; Frank B. Kellogg;
James A. Finch; Mary Gertrude Fendall; Harry M. Daugherty; Roger N. Baldwin; Oscar E.
Gordon.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; citizen and U.S. congressman protests against continued incarceration of IWW
prisoners; Joint Amnesty Committee; ACLU.
0612 C. W. Anderson. 1918-1976. 244pp. [file folder omitted]
People: C. W. Anderson; Michael Sapper; Oscar E. Gordon; F. J. Gallagher; Wencil Francik;
Phineas Eastman; Samuel B. Amidon; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Harry M. Daugherty; Augustus
T. Seymour; John C. Pollock; Robert P. Stewart; Robert H. Turner; Warren G. Harding; James
A. Finch; Fred Robertson; Thomas J. Howe.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners; decision, petition for rehearing, and petition for writ of error before the U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals in case against C. W. Anderson, et al; indictment in U.S. District Court in
case against C. W. Anders«), et al; requests for access to DOJ files relating to IWW cases.
0856 Wencil Francik. 1922-1923.40pp.
People: Wencil Francik; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; James A. Finch; (John)
Calvin Coolidge; Frank H. McFarland.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
0896 Wencil Francik. Previously Restricted Materials. 1923. 6pp.
People: Wencil Francik; James A. Finch.
Subjects: DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW prisoners; Bureau of
Investigation.
0902 F. J. Gallagher. 1920-1923. 50pp.
People: F. J. Gallagher; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; A. Mitchell Palmer; Fred
Robertson; Samuel B. Amidon; Caroline A. Lowe; (John) Calvin Coolidge; Frank H.
McFarland.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency on behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
31
Frame
0952
Michael Sapper. 1923.38pp.
People: Michael Sapper; Warren G. Harding; Harry M. Daugherty; James A. Finch; Frank H.
McFarland.
Subjects: Applications for executive clemency an behalf of IWW prisoners in the United States
with summaries of cases; DOJ recommendations regarding executive clemency for IWW
prisoners; reports from Leavenworth, Kansas, federal penitentiary regarding behavior of IWW
prisoners.
Reel 15
RG 204•Pardon Attorney Files cont
Wichita, Kansas, IWW Casefile 39-242 cont
0001
C. W. Anderson, et al» Kansas City•IWW. December 1-18,1919.1129pp. [file folder
omitted]
People: C. W. Anderson; John C. Pollock; Fred Robertson; Samuel B. Amidon; Fred H. Moore;
Caroline A. Lowe.
Subjects: Transcript of trial in case against C. W. Anderson, et al; DOJ prosecution of Wichita,
Kansas, IWW defendants; lists of exhibits, indexes, arguments, testimony, charge of the court,
verdicts, and sentences in case before the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas.
32
SUBJECT INDEX
The following index is a guide to the people and subjects found in the Department of Justice Investigative Files,
Part I: The Industrial Workers of the World. The user will find entries in the Subject Index for both states and
specific cities in the states, that is, there is an entry for Arizona and one for Bisbee, Arizona. The first number after
each entry refers to the microfilm reel, and the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number
where a particular casefile begins. Hence, 9: 0890 directs the researcher to the section of a casefile beginning at
Frame 0890 of Reel 9. By referring to the reel index of this guide, the researcher will find the casefile number or
section number and lists of the people and subjects in that casefile. Those people and subjects are listed in the order
that they appear on the microfilm.
American League against War and Fascism
ACLU
2:0677
formation of 9:0544
American Legion
general 2: 0299; 4:0000,0657; 6: 0286; 9: 0237;
11:0394,0761; 12:0001; 13:0001,0361,
3: 0608; 4:0057,0242,0246,0568; 5:0230,
0750,0851; 14:0001,0524
0799; 6:0705,0918; 7:0000,0078,0158;
10:0201,0812
National Mooney-Billings Committee 1: 0769;
American Protective League
2:0001
4: 0687,0784; 8: 0200; 10: 0499
publications 14:0155
see also National Civil Liberties Bureau
American Red Guard
Adams, Annette Abbott
4:0238
American Union against Militarism
6:0286,0407; 9:0237,0750; 10:0201, 0870
African-Americans
Civil Liberties Bureau 9:0544
Amidon, Samuel B.
see Black Americans
Agricultural Workers Industrial Union
4: 0597; 10:0201; 14: 0612,0902; 5:0001
IWW 4: 0387, 0597; 5: 0004,0309; 7: 0227;
Amnesty
9:0024,0750,0863; 10: 0000, 0201
see Clemency
Anarchist publications
1919 convention•Sioux City, Iowa 4: 0230
publications 5: 0284
5:0275
Ahlteen, Carl
Anderson, C. W.
4: 0597; 9: 0863; 10: 0000-0436; 12: 0001;
11:0394
Alabama
14:0524,0612; 15:0001
IWW case•Sheffield 6: 0656
Anderson, Edward
Alaska
6: 0000,0240,0286; 12: 0001; 13: 0001
IWW activities 4: 0023; 5: 0539, 0799
Anderson, Elmer
IWW cases 6: 0356
9: 0750; 12: 0001; 13: 0001,0354
Allen, Thomas S.
Anderson, George W.
4:0931
4:0679; 7:0165
American Federation of Labor
Andreytchine, George
Arizona State Federation of Labor 5: 0309
8:0465,0873,1136
cooperation with DOJ 4:1023
Antiwar and Selective Service matters
IWW infiltration of 6:0705
World War 11: 0206; 5: 0101; 7: 0229, 0245
San Francisco Bay Area, Committee for the
Arizona
Freedom of Mooney and Billings 3:0608
deportations 4:0747; 5: 0025,0309; 7: 0380Trades Union Committee for Unemployment
1125
IWW•by states 4: 0057
Insurance and Relief 2: 0001
Washington State Federation of Labor 1: 0000;
IWW activities 7:0059,0143,0227,0229,03801125
6:0918
Arizona State Federation of Labor
American Labor party
5:0309
2:0299,0568
33
Arkansas
IWW•by states 4: 0073,0657
Arnold, G. S.
6:0407
Arson and sabotage
California 1:1132; 7:0148; 9:0684,0750
Montana 9:0558
New York 7:0373
Oregon 5:0101
South Dakota 5: 0284
state legislation 4: 0784
Washington 5: 0968
Ashleigh, Charles
8:0873; 9: 0237; 11: 0001
Assassinations
attempt alleged in Oklahoma 5:0025
Atwood, John H.
10: 0201
Ault, E. P.
6:0918
Australia
Federated Moulders' (Metals) Union of Australia
2:0099
Azuara, Aurelio V.
11:0761
Babcock, E. Claude
2:0099
Bail and parole
IWW defendants 4: 0387,0597; 8: 0200,0873,
1136; 9:0024,0237,0863; 10:0000
see also Clemency
Baker, Newton D.
1:0351; 4:0080; 5: 0309; 6:0918; 8:0465;
10: 0499; 11:0761; 12:0001; 13:0001;
14:0001
Baldwin, Roger N.
1:0769; 2:0001; 4:0000; 6:0286; 8:0001,
0465; 9: 0237,0544; 11: 0394; 12: 0001,
0547; 13: 0750,0851; 14: 0001,0524
Baley, L. J.
4:1064; 7: 0229
Bargery, S. G.
4:0687; 6: 0542,0557
Beck, James M.
10:0201
Becker, Ray
7:0078
Belgium
amnesty laws 11: 0001
Bell, George L.
6:0407; 7:0072,0380; 9:0558
Bennett, Charles
12: 0277
Berger, Victor L.
1:0206; 9:0024
Berkman, Alexander
1:0351:6:0634
Bettman, Alfred
5: 0230; 6: 0356,0407; 7: 0229; 8: 0873;
10:0000
Bkkert, G. Rudolph
7: 0130
Bielaski, A. B.
5: 0017; 6: 0542,0557,0632,0656; 7:0158,
0165,0173,0213,0215,0227,0229,0245,
0380,1125; 8: 0433, 0465; 9: 0000,0544,
0684,0863; 10: 0457,0499,0642
Billings, Warren K.
1:0351-1071,1170; 2:0001-0891; 3:00010608,1172-1191; 9:0684; 13:0001;
14:0155
see also National Mooney-Billings Committee
Bisbee, Arizona
deportations 7:0380-1125
IWW activities 4:0057
protest against events in 5:0025,0309
Black Americans
assassination attempt•alleged 5:0025
IWW organization of 3:0937; 7:0096,0176;
8:0873
Block, Samuel
8:0001
Bollens, John H.
2: 0568
Bombings
U.S. Post Office Building•Chicago, Illinois
4:0387
Borah, William E.
12:0323; 14:0001
Bourg, G. J.
12:0303
Boyle, Emmett D.
7:0380
Brazier, Richard
12:0323
Bretland, Mattie L.
1:0769
Brewer, Harry
13:0388
Briggs, A. M.
4:0784
Brown, Roy
5:0901
Bulgaria
immigrant IWW defendant 4:0387
Bureau of Investigation
agents 7:0153,0251
general 7:0158,0165,0173,0208,0215;
10:0436; 14:0896
informant 7:0373
IWW division of Radical Department 4:0326
Military Intelligence Division cooperation with
5: 0901; 7: 0229
reports 6:0240,0536; 7:0250,0287,1125;
10:0767; 12:0917; 13:0683,0851
see also DOJ
Burkhart, S.
7:0380
34
IWW pubücations 5: 0101,0309,0539; 8: 0465
U.S. Post Office Department 3: 0937; 4:1023;
5: 0539; 6: 0642,0705; 7: 1125; 8: 0465;
9:0000
U.S. War Department 6: 0286
see also Mail
Centralia, Washington
IWW cases 6: 0705-0918; 7: 0000, 0248-0250
protests against suppression of IWW in 5: 0799
speaking engagement of E. T. Doran 7:0076
Chamber of Commerce
5:0309
Chaplin, Ralph
9: 0237; 12: 0370
Chicago, Illinois
DOJ raids 4: 0000
IWW cases 5:1000; 7:0148; 8:0001-1136;
9: 0000-0558, 0750; 12: 0001-0917
Christian, George B., Jr.
11:0001; 13:0750
Citizens•protests
IWW activities 3: 0937; 4:0000, 0038, 0057,
0080,0230, 0242,0246, 0557, 0568, 0661,
0687,0747,0773,0784,1012,1037; 5: 0000,
0004, 0018,0025,0101, 0230,0284, 0296,
0309,0539,0799,0901,0932,1000; 6: 0656,
0705; 7: 0072,0089,0164; 0229,0380, 0873;
8: 0001,0465,0873,1136; 9: 0000, 0024,
0237; 10: 0499,0642
lynching of Frank Little 4: 0931; 5:0309,0937;
7: 0176,0246, 0380
Mooney and Billings case 2:0001,0099, 0299,
0568,0677, 0748,0891; 3: 0001,0342,0462,
0608,1172,1191
treatment of IWW members 8: 0465,0873;
9: 0024,0237; 10:0000, 0201,0642;
13:0001, 0488, 0546, 0598,0750, 0851,
0892; 14:0001,0155,0524
Civil Rights Federation
2:0568
Clabaugh, Hinton
8: 0001,0433; 9: 0544
Clark, Stanley J.
8:0001,0433; 9:0237
Clemency
international amnesty laws 11:0001,0686;
12:0580
IWW défendante 6:0356,0407,0918; 9:0442;
10:0870
IWW prisoners 11:0001-0761; 12:0001-0917;
13:0001-0892; 14: 0001-0952
see also Bail and parole
Clyne, Charles F.
4:0687; 8:0001,0200,0465,0873,1136;
9:0237,0442,0863; 10:0870; 11:0001,
0394,0761; 12:0001,0303,0323,0439, 0580
Coal mines
operators 7:0158
see also Mine workers
Burns, William J.
4:0326; 7:0215; 12:0507; 13:0598,0683,0750;
14: 0389
Butte, Montana
Daily Record 10: 0499-0864
Immigration Service hearings 7: 0251
IWW activities 7: 0094,0176; 9: 0558
IWW case 10: 0499-0864
lynchings•Frank Uttie 4:0931; 5:0309,0937;
7:0176
CafTey, Francis G.
8:0200,0465,0873
California
American Federation of Labor Committee for the
Freedom of Mooney and Billings•San
Francisco Bay area 3:0608
Commission on Immigration and Housing
1:0000; 3: 0608; 7: 0072, 0380
district attorney 1:0559; 9:0684; 13: 0001;
14:0155
extradition of Alexander Berkman from New
York to 1:0351
free speech movement•San Diego 1:0000
governor 5:1000; 7:0072
IWW•by states 4: 0080; 7: 0148
IWW activities 1:0000-0206; 5:1000; 6:00000286; 7: 0072,0135-0142,0287; 9: 0684;
12: 0917
IWW cases•Fresno 9:0750
IWW cases•Sacramento 5:1000; 6:0000-0286,
0407-0536; 9:0750; 12:0001,0323
McNamara case 6:0240
Mooney and Billings case 1: 0351-1071,1170;
2:0001-0891; 3:0001-0608,1172-1191;
5:0539; 14:0155
recall elections•San Francisco 1: 0559
state criminal syndicalism laws 7:0287; 13:0892
statistics regarding arson and fires in 1:1132
Supreme Court of California 1: 0769; 9: 0684
California District Defense Committee
IWW 5:1000; 6:0000,0407; 7:0287
Caminetti, Arthur
7:0215
Campbell, Thomas E.
7:0380,0873
Canada
amnesty laws 11:0001
DOJ cooperation with Department of Justice of
4:0326
extradition of conspiracy defendants from
9:0442
IWW activities 4:0326
Cannery workers
IWW activities•Washington 5:0539,0799
Cannon, Joseph
7:0380
Cavanaugh, William E.
6:0240
Censorship
DOJ 4:1037; 5:0539; 8:0433
35
Cockran, W. Bourke
1:0562
Coeur d'Aleñe, Idaho
IWW case 6:0649
Coghlan, W. C.
6:0407
Colman, Louis
2:0099
Colorado
domestic workers 4:0931
IWW•by states 4:0230; 7:0153
IWW activities 7: 0229
Colorado State Penitentiary
IWW prisoners 6: 0356
Columbus, New Mexico
U.S. War Department list of IWW deportees
7: 0380
Columbus, Ohio
raids•Socialist Labor party offices 6: 0542,
0557
Comintern
general 4: 0230
IWW dissent with 4: 1064
publications 2:0299
Commission on Immigration and Housing of
California
1:0000; 3:0608; 7:0072,0380
Committee on Public Information
9: 0524
Communist Labor Party of America
DOJ raids 4: 0326
Communist Party of America
DOJ raids 4: 0326
Communist Party of the United States of America
2:0748
Connecticut
IWW•by states 4: 0238
Connellan, Robert
13:0418
Connolly, Louise
6: 0000, 0407
Connor, Roy P.
14:0001
Connor, Thomas J.
2:0299
Conspiracy
defendants•extradition of 9: 0442
state and federal laws 4:0587
Cook, David S.
8:0873,1136; 9:0024
Coolldge, (John) Calvin
11: 0394, 0761; 12: 0001; 13: 0001,0354, 0361,
0388, 0401,0418,0436,0452,0470,0488,
0516,0531,0546, 0568, 0582,0598,0690,
0704,0737,0750,0856,0875,0892;
14:0001,0612,0856,0902
Cooperation with DOJ
American Federation of Labor 4: 1023
Department of Justice of Canada 4:0326
Military Intelligence Division 5:0901; 7:0215,
0229
President's Mediation Commission 4: 0230;
5: 0901; 7: 0229
Senate Judiciary Committee 5:0949; 6:0661
states 4: 0597, 0687,0747; 5: 0309,0539,0899;
6: 0649,0705,0918; 7:0000,0072,0176,
0215
U.S. Department of Agriculture 4:0246
U.S. Department of Commerce 4:0661; 5:0799
U.S. Department of Labor 4: 0246; 0687;
5: 0309,0539; 0799; 6:0286,0705; 7: 0039,
0067; 9:0684; 10:0201,0812,0870
U.S. Department of State 4:0387; 7:0030; 0094;
9:0024
U.S. Department of the Interior 5: 0309
U.S. Navy Department•DOJ 8: 0465
U.S. Post Office Department•DOJ 8:0200,
0465; 10: 0767
U.S. War Department•DOJ 8: 0465,0873;
9: 0863; 10: 0499
Council of National Defense
3:0937;5:0309,0932
Coumos, Alexander
12:0394
Coutts, Elbert
6:0000,0240; 13:0001
Creel, George
8: 0465; 9: 0524
Criminal syndicalism laws
4: 0784; 5: 0230, 0799; 7: 0287; 12: 0917;
13:0892
Cummings, Homer S.
1: 0769; 2: 0099; 3: 0608; 9: 0024
Daily Record
Butte, Montana 10: 0499-0864
Daniels, Josephus
5:0539; 6: 0918; 8:0001,0465
Darling, Roy À.
10:0870
Darrow, Clarence
6:0240; 8:0873
Daugherty, Harry M.
4: 0246,0657; 6:0286; 7:0035,0039,0089,
0873; 9:0237; 10:0201,0870; 11:0001,
0394,0761; 12: 0001,0303,0323, 0370,
0439,0451,0458,0466,0484,0491, 0507,
0563,0580; 13: 0001,0354,0388, 0418,
0436,0452,0470,0488,0516,0531,0546,
0568,0582,0598,0690,0704, 0737,0750,
0856,0875,0892; 14: 0001,0155,0524,
0612,0856,0902,0952
Davis, C. W.
12:0404
Davis, Earl J.
13:0892
Davis, George T.
2:0001
Davis, James J.
7:0039
36
illegal arrests 10: 0470
investigation of
California state prosecutions 1:0351
Espionage Act matters 3:0937; 4: 0653;
6:0240
IWW activities 1:0000; 3:0937; 4:0073,
0080,0230, 0246,0326, 0387,0557,0568,
0587,0597,0657,0776,0784,1023,1035,
1037,1064; 5: 0025, 0101,0292,0309,
0539, 0799,0899; 6: 0240,0536; 7: 0072,
0130,0153,0163,0173, 0176, 0215,0251,
0287; 8:0200,0861; 10: 0499-0864
mail violations 1: 0769
Mooney and Billings case 1:1170; 2: 0299
Soviet Russian consulate 6: 0602-0632
misuse of search warrants 6:0542,0557
prosecutions 3: 0937; 4: 0387,0597,0679, 0747,
0776,0784,0931,1012; 5: 0025,0101, 0309,
0539,0799,0968-1000; 6: 0000-0557,0634,
0639,0705-0918; 7: 0000, 0148,0248, 0380,
0873; 8: 0001-1136; 9:0000-0863;
10:0000-0870; 12:0001; 15:0001
raids 4: 0000,0326,0387,0657,0687,0931,
1037; 5:0018, 0230,0275; 6: 0542,0557,
0705; 7:0153,0161,0165, 0173; 8: 0001,
0200; 9: 0024,0237; 10: 0000,0470
suppression of IWW 4: 0000,0057, 0246;
5: 0101,0309; 7: 0072; 8: 0465, 0873
see also Cooperation with DOJ
Domestic workers
IWW organization 4: 0931
Donovan, William J.
4: 0568; 7: 0000, 0158
Doran, E. T.
6:0918; 7: 0076; 8: 0200
Doran, J. T.
12: 0414
Dorée, E. F.
6: 0700; 9: 0237
Downing, Mortimer
6: 0240,0407; 13:0436
Duluth, Minnesota
Workers Socialist Publishing Company 6: 0642
Duncan, Robert
6: 0000,0407,0536; 13: 0001, 0750, 0892;
14:0001, 0155
Durant, W. J.
3:0342
Dymond, John
6:0240
Easley, Ralph M.
3: 0937; 8: 0200, 0465; 9: 0558; 13: 0001
Eastman, Phineas
14:0612
Ebel, Godfrey
6:0240,0286
Edwards, Forrest
9: 0024; 12: 0421
Eight-hour day
proposals 9: 0558
Davis John W.
4:0687; 7: 0380
Davison, E. C.
6:0542
Day, Edward C.
10:0499
De Bernardi, Pete
13: 0361
Debs, Eugene V.
3:0608
Debs, Theodore
3:0608
Dempsey, Roy
6:0286
Denver, Colorado
DOJ raids 7: 0153
IWW organization of domestic workers 4: 0931
Deportations
Arizona 4: 0747; 5: 0025,0309; 7: 0380-1125
and clemency actions 11:0001,0394,0761;
12: 0001,0303,0323,0458,0466, 0507;
13: 0704, 0856
general 6: 0286
Minnesota 4: 0747
Montana 7: 0039,0251; 10: 0711-0767
Washington 5: 0539,0799; 6: 0705
see also Evictions
DeSilver, Albert
6:0286; 9: 0863; 10: 0000; 12: 0580
Detective agencies
see Private detective agencies
Detroit, Michigan
IWW cases 6: 0542-0557
Devils Lake, North Dakota
IWW activities 6: 0700
Dezelin, Joe
7:0089
Dobson, William
3:0608
DOJ
assistant U.S. attorney criticism of governor of
California 5: 1000
bail and parole of IWW defendants 4: 0387,
0597; 8: 0200,0873,1136; 9: 0024,0863;
10:0000
Bureau of Investigation 4: 0326; 5: 0901;
6: 0240,0536; 7: 0153,0158, 0165,0173,
0208,0215,0229,0250,0251,0287,0373,
1125; 10: 0436, 0767; 12: 0917; 13: 0683,
0851; 14: 0896
censorship 4:1037; 5:0309, 0539; 8: 0433
clemency for IWW defendants 6:0356,0407,
0918; 9: 0442; 10: 0870
clemency for IWW prisoners 11:0001-0761 ;
12:0001-0917; 13:0001-0892; 14:00010952
documents•IWW 4:0000,0038,0387; 5:0230;
6:0286,0672; 8:0465,0873,1136; 9:0000,
0024,0237; 10:0000; 14: 0612
documents•Mooney and Billings case 3: 0748
37
Elections
recall•San Francisco 1: 0559
U.S. presidency•1936 2: 0299
Elliott, Frank
13: 0516
Ellis Island, New York
IWW activities 4: 1064
Eltlng, Victor
10:0499
Ely, Richard T.
8:0465
Embree, A. S.
5: 0539; 7: 0380; 8: 0200; 10: 0767
Emigration
to Soviet Russia 6: 0602,0632; 7: 0176; 9: 0237,
0442,0544
Employers' Association of the Inland Empire
3:0937
Employers' Association of Washington State
5:0539
England
see Great Britain
Equi, Marie
6:0356
Ernst, Morris L.
11:0394
Esmond, Frederick H.
4:0080; 5: 1000; 6: 0000, 0240,0286; 7: 0287
Espionage Act
convictions 3: 0937; 11: 0001,0394,0686;
12: 0001,0277
investigations 4: 0653; 5: 0101; 6: 0240
prosecutions 6: 0356; 8: 0433,0465,0861;
10: 0499, 0812
Estabrook, F. W.
1:0000
Ettor, Joseph J.
8: 0001, 0465
Everest, Wesley
6:0918
Everett, Washington
massacre of IWW members 1:0000,0206;
5:0309
Evictions
Michigan 4:0687
see also Deportations
Extradition
of Alexander Berkman from New York to
California 1:0351
of conspiracy defendants from Canada 9: 0442
Factionalism and internal politics
IWW 7: 0176
Fanning, Raymond S.
8:0873; 9:0024
Farmer-Labor party
2:0299
Farmers' Nonpartisan League of North Dakota
5:0004,0017
Federal Bureau of Investigation
see Bureau of Investigation
Federated Moulders' (Metals) Union of Australia
2:0099
Feeney, John P.
8:0465
Feinberg, Harry
13: 0892
Fendall, Mary Gertrude
11:0394,0761; 12:0001; 13:0001,0598,0750,
0892; 14: 0155,0524
Fkkert, Charles M.
1: 0559; 6: 0000,0240; 9: 0684; 13: 0001;
14:0155
Field, Anna B.
6:0705
Field, Sara B.
9:0237
Finances
IWW 7: 0380
see also Fund raising
Finch, James A.
9: 0237; 11: 0001,0394, 0761; 12: 0001,0277,
0370,0466,0507,0580; 13:0001,0418,
0598, 0704, 0892; 14: 0001,0155,0389,
0524, 0612, 0856,0896,0952
Finerty,JohnF.
2:0001
Fires
see Arson
Fisheries workers
IWW organization 5: 0799
Fitch, John A.
3:0462
Fitts, William C.
4: 0387,0687, 0784, 0931,1012,1037; 5: 0017,
0018, 0025,0101,0275,0309,0539, 0901,
0932,0949,0968,1000; 6: 0000,0407,0536,
0542,0557,0602,0632, 0639,0649, 0656;
7: 0153,0165,0173,0215, 0227,0229,0245,
0380, 0873, 1125; 8: 0001,0200,0433, 0465,
0861; 9:0237,0442, 0524,0558,0684, 0750,
0863; 10: 0457
Fleming, Joseph B.
9: 0024,0237
Fletcher, Benjamin H.
7: 0176; 8: 0200; 9: 0000
Florida
IWW•by states 4: 0242
Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley
1: 1132; 8: 0001, 0200,0465, 0873; 11: 0001
Flynn, Thomas A.
7: 0380,0873
Fort Meade, Maryland
radicals 6:0637
Fort Smith, Arkansas
IWW activities 4: 0073
Foss, John
12:0426
Foster, Leonard
3: 0937; 5: 0539
38
Grave, John
13:0470
Gray, Harry
13:0452
Great Britain
amnesty laws• 11:0001
Labour Defense Council 4: 0038
unions 3: 0937
Green, Peter
12:0439
Gregory, Thomas W.
1: 0000,0351; 3: 0937; 4: 0000,0038,0080,
0246,0326, 0387,0679,0687, 0747,0784,
0931; 5:0025,0101,0309,0539,0799, 0937,
0949,0968,1000; 6: 0000,0356,0407, 0542,
0602; 7:0072,0148,0176,0215,0380, 0873;
8: 0001,0200,0433,0465,0873; 9: 0524,
0558,0684,0750,0863; 10: 0457, 0470, 0499
Guiney, Neil
6: 0649
Gulick, Sidney L.
6:0918
Habeas corpus proceedings
2: 0001; 4: 0784; 5: 0539,0799; 7:0039
Hammer, Henry
13:0488
Hand, Learned
8:0200
Hanson, Ole
5:0799
Harding, Warren G.
11:0001,0394,0761; 12: 0303, 0323,0370,
0439, 0451,0458,0466, 0484,0491, 0507,
0563; 13: 0001,0361,0388,0401, 0418,
0436,0452,0470,0488,0516,0531,0568,
0582,0598, 0690,0704, 0737,0750, 0856,
0875; 14: 0001,0612, 0856,0902, 0952
Hardwick, Thomas W.
14:0001
Hardy, George
4:1064; 7: 0176; 8: 0433, 0465; 9: 0544
Harper, Joseph
6:0286
Hart, Louis F.
6: 0679,0705
Hayden, Carl
3: 0937; 4: 0057
Hays Arthur Garfield
11:0394
Haywood, William D.
1: 0000; 4: 0080,0387,0687,0931,1037;
5: 0101,0539; 6: 0286,0557,0705,0918;
8:0001-1136; 9: 0000-0558; 12:0580
Henning, E. J.
12:0001
Henshaw, F. W.
9:0684; 14:0155
Herrón, William C.
7: 0873; 8: 0200; 10: 0000, 0870
Foster, William Z.
7:0035
Fox, Roy C.
10: 0870
Fraina, Louis C.
4:0238
France
amnesty laws 11: 0001
Francik, Wencil
14: 0612,0856,0896
Francis, David R.
3:0937
Free speech movement
Butte, Montana 10:0499
San Diego, California 1: 0000
Spokane, Washington 1:0000
Fresno, California
IWW case 9: 0750
Friedrich, Jacob
8:0200
Frierson, William L.
6: 0286; 9: 0024; 10: 0000,0812
Füllen, Charles D.
6:0918
Fund raising
IWW 7: 0287; 8:0433; 9: 0024; 12: 0917
Galbraith, F. W., Jr.
10:0201
GaUagher, F. J.
14: 0612,0902
Gardner, Gilson
13:0001
General Defense Committee
IWW 4: 0080,0387; 5: 0025; 6:0286,0700;
7:0078; 8: 0001,0200,0465,1136; 9:0024,
0237; 10: 0470; 12: 0001,0323; 13: 0892
General strikes
see Strikes
Germer, Adolph
3:0937; 4: 0387; 8: 0001
Gibson, White E.
9:0558
Gifford, Walter S.
7:0380
Giovannitti, Arturo
8:0001,0200,0465,0873; 9: 0024
Globe, Arizona
mineworkers 7:0380,0873
Goldman, Emma
1:0351; 6: 0634
Gompers, Samuel
1: 0351; 6: 0705; 7: 0380; 9:0237,0558
Gordon, Oscar E.
14:0524,0612
Graber, Joseph
8:0001; 12:0434
Grand Rapids, Michigan
eviction of organizers 4:0687
Granite Mountain, Montana
arson 9:0558
39
HUles, Charles D.
1:0000
HUlquIt, Morris
12: 0580
Hlnkle, Walter Mills
6:0637
Hoboes
IWW organization 7: 0100,0229
Hood, William
6:0000; 13:0401
Hoover, Herbert C.
11:0394
Hoover, J. Edgar
1:0969,1170; 2:0748; 4: 0038, 0326,1037,
1064; 7: 0142,0158, 0161,0163, 0164,0167,
0176,0215,0229,0248, 0373; 9: 0000, 0024,
0237, 0442,0750; 10:0201,0436,0499,
0642,0767,0812, 0870
Hospital workers
IWW organization of 7:0143
Houston, David F.
4:0246
Howat, Alexander
10:0201
Howe, Thomas J.
14: 0612
Hughes, Charles Evans
7:0873;11:0394
Hungary
inunigrants•IWW 4:1064
Hunt, George W. P.
7:0380, 0873
Huntington, Henry S.
10: 0870
Idaho
IWW•by states 4: 0246,1247
IWW activities 7: 0229,0251
IWW case•Coeur d'Aleñe 6: 0649
Illinois
DOJ raids•Chicago 4: 0000
IWW•by states 4: 0326-0557
IWW cases 5:1000; 8:0001-1136; 9:00000558,0750;12:0001-0917
Immigrants
Bulgarian 4:0387
cases•general 7: 0067; 9: 0684; 10: 0870
Ellis Island 4: 1064
foreign language publication 6:0642
Hungarian 4: 1064
internment of aliens•World War 19: 0863;
10: 0201
Italian 7: 0229
labor
Califomia4:0080;7:0148
Montana 7:0251; 10:0711
North Carolina 7:0089
Texas 7:0215
Washington 5:0309,0539,0799; 6: 0705;
7:0229
see also Deportations
Immigration Service
hearings 7: 0251
see also U.S. Department of Labor
Indiana
IWW•by states 4:0568; 7:0158
Socialist party of Indiana 2:0891
Industrial disputes
see Strikes
Inland Empire
Employers' Association of the Inland Empire
3:0937
see also entries under component states
Insanity
IWW prisoners 6: 0286
Insurance companies
statistics regarding arson and fires in California
1:1132
International Association of Machinists
seizure of records of 6:0542
International Labor Defense
2:0099
International Molders' Union of North America
2: 0001; 3:0001
see also Tom Mooney Molders' Defense
Committee
International Red Aid
2:0099
International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter
Workers
eviction of organizers from Grand Rapids,
Michigan 4:0687
International Workers' Defense League
general 3: 0462; 8:1136; 9: 0684
publications 1:0351,0562,1132
International Workers Order
2: 0677,0748; 3: 0608
Internment
aliens•World War 19: 0863; 10: 0201
Iowa
Agricultural Workers Industrial Union•Sioux
City 4:0230
IWW•by states 4: 0587
Italy
amnesty laws 11: 0001
immigrants from 7: 0229
IWW•by geography
Alabama 6:0656
Alaska 4:0023; 5:0539,0799
Arizona 4: 0057; 5: 0309; 7:0059,0143,0227,
0229,0380-1125
Arkansas 4:0073,0657
CaUfomia 1:0000; 4:0080; 5:1000; 6:00000286; 7:0072,0135,0141-0142,0148,0287;
9: 0684,0750; 12:0917; 13: 0001-0892;
14:0001-0501
Canada 4:0326; 9: 0442
Colorado 4:0230; 7:0153,0229
Connecticut 4:0238
Florida 4:0242
Idaho 4:0246,1247; 6:0649; 7:0229,0251
40
IWW•by geography cont
Illinois 4:0326-0557; 5:1000; 7:0148; 8:00011136; 9:0000-0558; 12:0001-0917
Indiana 4:0568; 7:0158
Iowa 4:0230,0587
Kansas 4:0597,0776; 5:1000; 7:0161,0208;
9:0237,0863; 10:0000-0436; 11:00010761; 12: 0001-0580; 13: 0001-0892;
14: 0001-0952; 15: 0001
Kentucky 4:0653
Louisiana 4: 0657; 7:0163
Maine 4:0661
Maryland 4:0661; 6:0637; 7: 0164,0373
Massachusetts 4:0679; 7:0165
Mexico 7:0030,0215
Michigan 4:0687; 5:0309; 6:0542-0557
Minnesota 1:0206; 4:0747; 6:0642; 7: 0167;
10:0000
Mississippi 4:0773
Missouri 4:0776; 7:0173
Montana 4:0784; 7:0039,0094,0176,0229,
0246,0251,0380; 9:0558; 10:0499-0864
Nebraska4:0931;7:0208
Nevada 4:1012; 7:0213
New Jersey 4:1023
New Mexico 4:1035; 7:0229,0380
New York 4:1037-1064; 7: 0096,0373;
12:0323
North Carolina 5: 0000; 7: 0089
North Dakota 5:0004-0017; 6:0700
Ohio 5:0018; 6:0542,0557
Oklahoma 5: 0025; 7:0215; 10:0000
Oregon 1: 0000; 5:0101,0309,0539; 6:0634,
0642; 8: 0861
Pacific Coast 9:0558
Pacific Northwest 1:0000-0206; 3: 0937;
5:0539; 6:0602,0705; 7:0072; 9:0524,
0544
Pennsylvania 5:0230; 7:0176
Rhode Island 5:0275; 7:0034
Russia 6:0602,0637; 8:0861 ; 9:0024,0237,
0442,0544
South Dakota 5: 0284; 9:0024
Tennessee 5:0292
Texas 5:0296; 7:0141-0142,0215,0229
Utah 1:0000; 6:0672; 7:0227
Virginia 6:0639
Washington 1:0000,0206; 5: 0309-0799,0968;
6:0602-0632,0672,0679,0700-0918;
7:0000,0076,0078,0100,0229,0248-0250;
8:0861; 10:0457-0470
West Virginia 5:0899
Wisconsin 1:0206; 5:0901; 7:0245
Wyoming 5:0932
IWW•by subject
Agricultural Workers Industrial Union 4:0230,
0387,0597; 5:0004,0284; 7:0227; 9:0024,
0750,0863; 10:0000,0201
arson and sabotage 1:1132; 4:0784; 5:0101,
0284,0968; 7: 0148,0373; 9: 0558, 0684,
0750
bail and parole for defendants 4:0387,0597;
8: 0200,0873,1136; 9:0024, 0237,0863;
10:0000
California District Defense Committee 5:1000;
6: 0000,0407; 7: 0287
clemency for defendants 6:0356,0407,0918;
9:0442; 10:0870
clemency for prisoners 11:0001-0761; 12:00010917; 13: 0001-0892; 14:0001-0952
conventions 4:0230,0587,0931,1064
dissent with Comintern 4:1064
documents 4:0000,0038,0387; 5: 0101,0230,
0275; 6:0286,0672; 7:0215; 8:0200,0465,
0873,1136; 9: 0000, 0024,0237; 10: 0000;
14:0612
DOI raids 4:0000,0326,0387,0657,0687,
0931,1037; 5:0018,0230,0275; 6:0542,
'0557; 7:0153,0161,0167,0173; 8:0001,
0200; 9:0024,0237; 10:0000,0470
Everett, Washington, massacre of IWW members
1:0000,0206; 5:0309
executive board 4:0931; 5:0309,0937; 7: 0176,
0246,0380
factionalism and internal politics 7: 0176
finances 7:0380
fund raising 7: 0287; 8: 0433; 9: 0024; 12: 0917
general 3:0937; 4:0000,0038
General Defense Committee 4:0080,0387;
5: 0025; 6: 0286,0700; 7: 0078; 8: 0001,
0200,0465,1136; 9: 0024, 0237; 10: 0470;
12:0001,0323; 13:0892
hospital workers 7: 0143 ""
immigrant labor 4:1064; 5: 0539,0799; 7: 0089,
0148,0215,0229,0251
infiltration of American Federation of Labor
6:0705
investigations of 1:0000; 3:0937; 4:0000,0073,
0080,0230,0246,0326,0387,0557,0568,
0587,0597,0657,0776,0784,1023,1035,
1037,1064; 5: 0018,0101,0230,0275, 0292,
0309,0539,0799,0899; 6: 0240,0536;
7: 0072,0130,0153,0163,0173,0176, 0215,
0229,0251,0287; 8:0200,0861; 10:04990864
legal defense efforts 5:0799; 7:0078,0173,
0287; 8:0200,0433; 9:0024,0237,0524,
0544; 10:0000,0201; 12:0917
legislation 5:0949
life histories 7:0380
list of potential detainees 8:0433
local police raids 5:0539; 7:0215,0287;
10:0470,0499-0642
lumber workers 4:0784; 5:0101,0309,0539,
0799,0968; 7:0176,0229,0380; 9: 0558
lynchings 4:0931; 5: 0309,0937; 6: 0705,0918;
7:0176,0246
mail 8:0200; 9: 0000,0544
41
IWW•by subject cont.
Marine Transport Workers Union 7: 0287, 0373
mass meetings 4:1064; 5: 0309,0799; 7:0176
membership book 5: 0101
membership statistics 1: 0000
Military Intelligence Division raids 6: 0672
mine workers 4: 0080, 0568,0687,0747,0784,
1012; 5: 0899; 7: 0030,0059,0213, 0227,
0380-1125; 9: 0558
New York Defense Committee 4:1037; 12:0323
Oil Workers Industrial Union 7:0173,0215,
0287; 9: 0863; 10: 0000, 0201
organization of black Americans 3: 0937;
7: 0096,0176; 8: 0873
organization of Mexican-Americans 5:0296
press coverage of trials 4: 0387
prisoners 5: 1000; 6: 0240,0286; 7: 0078;
9: 0024, 0237,0750; 10: 0000; 11: 00010761; 12: 0001-0917; 13: 0001-0892;
14: 0001-0952
propaganda 7: 0030,0245
prosecution of 3: 0937; 4: 0326,0387,0597,
0679, 0776,0784, 0931; 5: 0018,0101, 0309,
0539, 0799,0968,1000; 6: 0000-0557,0634,
0639-0679,0705-0918; 7: 0000,0039, 0067,
0078, 0148,0176,0208, 0215, 0248,0251,
0287; 8: 0001-1136; 9: 0000-0863;
10: 0000-0870; 12: 0001; 15: 0001
protests against
activities of 1: 0000; 3: 0937; 4:0000, 0057,
0080,0230,0242,0246,0557,0568,0661,
0687,0747,0773, 0784,1012,1023,1037;
5: 0000, 0004,0018,0025,0101, 0230,
0284, 0296,0309, 0539,0799,0901,0932,
1000; 6: 0656,0679,0705,0918; 7: 0072,
0089, 0164,0229,0380, 0873; 8: 0001,
0465, 0873,1136; 9: 0000,0024,0237;
10: 0499, 0642
Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen
5:0101
treatment of members 3:0937; 4:0038;
5: 0025, 0309,0799, 0937,1000; 6: 0240,
0705, 0918; 7: 0072, 0248; 8: 0465,0873;
9: 0024, 0237; 10: 0000, 0201,0642,
0870; 13: 0001,0488,0546,0598, 0750,
0851,0892; 14: 0001,0155, 0524
publications 1: 0000, 0206, 0351,1132; 3: 0937;
4: 0246, 0387, 0931,1037,1064,1247;
5: 0101, 0230, 0275, 0284,0309,0539;
6:0705,0918; 7:0161,0173,0229, 0251,
0287,0380; 8: 0001,0465,1136; 9: 0000,
0024,0863; 10: 0000,0201; 11: 0001,0394,
0761; 12:0001; 13:0001,0892
public relations 9: 0684
Railroad Workers Industrial Union 4: 0387;
7: 0100, 0135-0142,0227
seamen 7: 0215
Seattle District Defense Committee 5:0539;
10: 0470
shipyard workers 7: 0215
smelter workers 7:0227
songbook 4:0080
strikes 1:0206; 4:0038,0080,0246,0747,0776,
1064; 5: 0004,0101,0309,0539,0968;
6: 0705,0918; 7: 0135-0142,0176,0213,
0227, 0229, 0287,0380-1125; 9:0558;
10:0457,0499-0711
suppression of 4: 0000,0038, 0080,0246;
5: 0101,0309,0539, 0799,0949; 7: 0072,
0078
travel arrangements 7:0100,0229
union organization 4: 0784, 0931,1023,1037,
1064,1247; 5: 0004,0101,0309,0539,0799,
0899,0968; 7: 0030, 0059,0100,0135-0142,
0143,0173,0176,0213, 0215, 0227,0229,
0287, 0380-1125; 8: 0861; 9: 0558,0750,
0863; 10: 0000,0201,0499; 11: 0761;
12:0917
U.S. Forest Service 4:0246
Jackson, Gardner
2:0099
James, C. R.
7:0096
Jeffrey, Frank R.
10:0870
Jenkins, John
2:0099
Jerome, Arizona
mine workers 7: 0380,0873
Johanson, Antone
7: 0173; 9: 0544
Johanson, Ragner
11:0394
Johnson, Hiram W.
1:0000
Johnson, P. H.
5: 1000; 6: 0240, 0407,0536; 14:0155
Joint Amnesty Committee
11:0394,0761; 12: 0001; 13: 0001,0598,0683,
0750,0851,0892; 14: 0155,0524
Jones, Wiley E.
7:0873
Kane, Francis Fisher
5:0230
Kane, H. F.
12:0451
Kansas
IWW•by states 4: 0597; 7: 0161
IWW case•general 7:0208
IWW case•Wichita 4:0776; 5: 1000; 9: 0863;
10:00<XM)436; 12: 0001; 14: 0524-0952;
15:0001
see also Leavenworth Penitentiary
Kauffeldt, Werner
7:0373
Kauftnan, Anna
6:0286
Kellogg, Frank B.
13: 0488; 14:0524
42
Kellogg, Paul U.
6:0918
Kent, William
6:0407
Kentucky
IWW•by states 4: 0653
Socialist party of Kentucky 2: 0891
Kerlln, Robert T.
12: 0370
King, Alexander C.
6:0918; 7:0873; 8:0200,0873
King, William H.
6:0661
Klzer, Donald F.
10: 0870
Klamath Falls, Oregon
IWW prosecutions 5:0101,0309
Labor
eight-hour day proposals 9: 0558
problems•Western states 7:0380
see also Unions
Labor agents
immigrant labor 7:0089
Labour Defense Council
Great Britain 4:0038
Lamar, W. H.
8:0465
Lambert, Charles L.
11:0761
La Monte, George M.
6:0407
Landls, Kenesaw M.
4:0387; 8:0001,0465,0873; 9:0558
Lane, Franklin K.
1:0000
Lanier, Alexander S.
6:0286; 8:0873; 9: 0237; 11:0001; 13: 0851,
0856
Lansing, Robert
4:0387
Larson, Oscar W.
6:0672
Laws
arson•state 4:0784
Chamber of Commerce recommendations
5:0230
conspiracy•state and federal 4:0587
criminal syndicalism 4:0784; 5:0230,0799
martial law•Washington 5:0309
U.S. Congress 5:0949; 6: 0661
League for National Unity
8:0465
Leavenworth Penitentiary
IWW prisoners 6:0286; 9:0024,0237,0750;
11:0001-0761; 12:0001-0917; 13: 00010892;14:0001-0952
Legal defense efforts
alleged jury tampering 6:0240
California District Defense Committee of the
IWW 5: 1000; 6:0000
General Defense Committee of the IWW 4:0080,
0387; 5:0025; 6: 0286,0700; 7: 0078;
8:0001,0200,0465,1136; 9:0024,0237;
10:0470; 12:0001,0323
IWW 5: 0799; 7: 0078,0173,0287; 8:0200,
0433; 9:0024, 0237,0524, 0544; 10: 0000,
0201; 12: 0917; 13: 0001
New York Defense Committee of the IWW
4:1037; 12: 0323
Seattle District Defense Committee of the IWW
5:0539; 10: 0470
Life histories
IWW deportees 7:0380
Lind, John
4: 0747; 8: 0200
Lipton, Anna
7:0373
Liquor
illegal traffic in 4:0747
Listman, George P.
6:0918
Little, Frank
4: 0931; 5: 0309,0937; 7: 0176,0246,0380
Lloyd, Harry
12:0458
Local unions
protests
Everett, Washington, massacre of IWW
members 1:0000,0206
lynching of Frank Little 5:0937
Mooney and Billings case 1:0351,0562,
0769,0979,1054,1071; 2: 0001,0099,
0299, 0568,0677,0748,0891; 3: 0001,
0342,0462,0608,1172,1191
seizure of records of 6: 0542
Lorton, Burt
12:0466
Los Angeles, California
McNamara case 6: 0240
Louisiana
IWW•by states 4:0657; 7:0163
Lowe, Caroline A.
6:0286; 9: 0237; 10: 0201; 14:0902; 15: 0001
Lowery, Fred
5: 0539,0799
Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen
general 5:0799
protests against 5:0101
Loyalty League of America
8:0380
Luber, Chris A.
13:0531
Lubin, Simon J.
3:0608; 6:0407; 7: 0072,0287; 9:0558
Luhring, Oscar R.
10:0870
Lumber workers
IWW activities
.n^,
Arizona 7:0380
Montana 4:0784; 7:0176
43
Massachusetts
IWW•by states 4:0679; 7:0165
Massacres
Everett, Washington 1: 0000,0206; 5:0309
Mass arrests
4:0246
Mass meetings
Communist Party of America 4:0687
IWW 4:1064; 5: 0309,0799; 7:0176
protests
Everett, Washington, massacre of IWW
members 1: 0000
Frank Little lynching 5: 0309,0937
Mooney and Billings case 1:0351,0562,
0769,0979,1054,1071; 2: 0001,0299,
0568,0677,0748,0891; 3: 0001,0342,
0462,0608,1172,1191
Seattle, Washington 6: 0672
Maison, E. A.
5:0968
Mena, Arkansas
IWW activities 4: 0073
Merchant Marines
union organization 5: 0539
Metal workers
union organization 4:1023; 7:0176
Metzen, John L.
4:0387; 5:0025; 8: 0001,1136
Mexican-Americans
IWW organization of 5: 02%
Mexico
IWW activities 7:0030,0215
Socialist Party of Mexico 3: 0462
Miami, Arizona
mine workers 7: 0380, 0873
Michigan
IWW•by states 4: 0687
IWW activities 5:0309
IWW cases•Detroit 6:0542-0557
Mlckelson, Gunnar
2:0299
Military Intelligence Division
cooperation with Bureau of Intelligence 5: 0901;
7:0229
DOJ cooperation with 7: 0215
informant reports 4:1064
raids 6: 0672
surveillance 5: 0230,0539
Military personnel
alleged involvement in lynching 5: 0937
Milner, Lucille B.
4: 0657; 11: 0394
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
antiwar activities 7:0245
Mine workers
Bisbee, Arizona 7: 0380-1125
immigrant labor and strikes•Shasta County,
California 4:0080
IWW activities
Arizona 7:0059
Lumber Workers cont
Oregon 5:0101
Washington 5: 0309,0539,0799.0968;
7:0229
strikes 5:0101; 9:0558
union organization 9: 0558
Lynchings
Everest, Wesley 6: 0705, 0918
Little, Frank 4:0931; 5:0309,0937; 7:0176,
0246,0380
Lyons, Daniel M.
12: 0547
McCarty, Joseph
6: 0286
McCook, Willis F.
7:0035
McCutcheon, Herbert
9:0442
MacDonald, J. A.
12: 0478
McFarland, Frank H.
14: 0856,0902, Ö952
McGill, James
1:0000
McKinnon, Charles H.
9:0000; 12:0484
McLaughlin, Phil
13:0546
McNamara, J. B.
6:0240
McNamara, J. J.
6:0240
MaU
prisoners 6:0286,0356; 9:0024,0237; 12:0370,
0451,0491; 13:0750,0856; 14:0001
surveillance of IWW 8: 0200; 9: 0544
violation of U.S. Post Office Department
regulations 1: 0769; 10: 0711-0767
see also Censorship
Maine
IWW•by states 4:0661
Manning, James H.
6:0286
Mare Island, California
Navy Yard 9:0684
Marine Transport Workers Union
IWW 7: 0287, 0373
Marsh, E. P.
1:0000
Marshall, John
10: 0870
Marshfleld, Oregon
IWW case 6:0642
Martin, Warren F.
12:0001; 13:0892
Maryland
Fort Meade 6:0637
IWW•by states 4: 0661; 7: 0164
Marine Transport Workers Union 7: 0373
44
National Civic Federation
3:0937; 9:0558; 13: 0001
National Civil Liberties Bureau
formation of 9:0544
general 8: 0001; 9: 0863; 10: 0000
see also ACLU
National Defense Council
7:0380
National Labor Council
3:0462
National Mooney-Billings Committee
ACLU 1: 0769; 2: 0001
Naturalization cases
see Immigrants
Naval Intelligence Division
illegal arrest 5:0799; 10:0470
surveillance 5: 0230,0539; 9: 0544
Nebeker, Frank K.
4: 0387; 5: 0309,0968,1000; 6: 0649; 7: 0148,
0227,0380; 8: 0001,0200,0433,0465, 0873,
1136; 9:0000, 0024, 0237,0442,0524,0558,
0684,0863; 10: 0812; 11: 0001
Nebraska
IWW•by states 4: 0931 ; 7: 0208
Negroes
see Black Americans
Nelles, Walter
7:0873
Nelson, Knute
14:0524
Nevada
IWW•by states 4:1012; 7:0213
New Jersey
IWW•by states 4: 1023
New Mexico
IWW•by states 4: 1035
IWW activities 7: 0229
IWW deportees 7: 0380
New York
arson and sabotage 7: 0373
extradition of Alexander Berkman to California
1:0351
formation of American Red Guard in New York
City 4: 0238
IWW•by states 4: 1037-1064
IWW activities 7: 0096,0373
New York Defense Committee
IWW 4:1037; 12:0323
Nolan, Thomas
5:0968; 6:0356
Non-Partisan League
4:0326
see also Fanners' Nonpaitisan League of North
Dakota
North Carolina
IWW•by states 5: 0000
IWW activities 7:0089
North Dakota
IWW•by states 5: 0004-0017
IWW activities 6: 0700
Mine workers, cont
Mexico 7:0030
Montana 4: 0784; 7:0176; 9:0558
Nevada 7:0213
Utah 7:0227
WestViiginia5:0899
strikes
Indiana coal fields 4: 0568
Michigan 4:0687
Minnesota 4: 0687,0747
Nevada 4:1012
Western Federation of Miners 7:0059
Minnesota
DOJ raids 7: 0161; 10: 0000
IWW•by states 4: 0747; 7: 0167
IWW activities 1: 0206; 4: 0687
Workers Socialist Publishing Company 6:0642
Minor, Robert
6:0918
The Mlnutemen of Seattle, Washington
l
5:0309
Mississippi
IWW•by states 4:0773
Missouri
IWW•by states 4:0776; 7:0173
Mitch, William
3:0608
Mitchell, William D.
6:0286; 11:0394
Montana
deportations 7:0039,0251
Immigration Service hearings 7: 0251
IWW•by states 4: 0784; 7: 0176
IWW activities 7: 0094; 9: 0558
IWW case•Butte 10: 0499-0864
lynchings-^Sutte 4:0931; 5: 0309,0937; 7:0176,
0246
Mooney, John
1:0769
Mooney, Thomas J.
1:0351-1071,1132-1170; 2: 0001-0891;
3:0001-0608,1172-1191; 5:0539; 6:0000,
0286; 9: 0684; 13: 0001; 14:0155
see also National Mooney-Billings Committee;
Railroad Employees' Committee for the
Release of Thomas J. Mooney
Tom Mooney Defense Committee
2:0099
Tom Mooney MoWers' Defense Committee
2:0001,0299; 3:0462
Moore, Fred H.
6:0602,0632; 10:0201; 15:0001
Morgan, J. Edward
1:0351
Moyer, Charles
4:0687; 9:0237
Murdock, George N.
5:1000; 6:0000,0240,0407,0536; 7:0158;
8:0200,0465,0873; 9: 0000,0863
45
O'Brian, John Lord
5:0230,0309,0539,0799,0901; 6: 0000,0240,
0356, 0407,0602, 0632,0661; 7: 0380;
8: 0001, 0873; 9:0863; 10: 0000,0457,0470,
0499; 11: 0394, 0761
O'Connell, George
13: 0568
O'Connor, J. Robert
4:0080; 7:0148; 8:0465; 9:0750
Office of Naval Intelligence
see Naval Intelligence Division
O'Hare, Kate Richards
5:0004
Ohio
DOJ raids 6:0542,0557
IWW•by states 5:0018
Socialist Party of Ohio 3:0001
OU Workers Industrial Union
IWW 7: 0173,0215,0287; 9: 0863; 10: 0000,
0201
Oklahoma
DOJ raids 10:0000
domestic workers 4:0931
IWW•by states 5:0025
IWW activities 7: 0215
Olivereau, Louise
5:0968; 6: 0356
Olson, Edwin A.
10: 0870
Omaha, Nebraska
IWW convention 4: 0931
Oregon
IWW•by states 5: 0101
IWW activities 1:0000; 5:0309,0539; 8:0861
IWW case•Marshfield 6: 0642
IWW case•Portland 6: 0634
Owsley, Alvin M.
4:0246
Pacific Coast
IWW activities 9: 0558
Pacific Northwest
Employers' Association of the Inland Empire
3:0937
governors 7:0072
IWW activities in 1:0000-0206; 6:0602;
9: 0524, 0544
IWW infiltration of American Federation of
Labor in 6: 0705
suppression in 5:0539
see also Western states; entries under component
states
Pagan, Oliver E.
9:0863; 10:0000
Page, Charles
8:0001
Palmer, A. Mitchell
1:0562; 4: 0057,0080,0597,0784,1012,1037;
5:0025,0799; 6:0286,0356,0407,0679,
0700,0705,0918; 7:0873; 8:0873,1136;
9:0000,0024; 10: 0000, 0201, 0499,0642,
0711,0812; 11: 0001,0394; 13: 0001;
14:0902
Palmer, Ida
9:0237
Pancner, John
9:0237
Pardons
see Clemency
Parker, Carlton H.
8:0433
Parole
see Bail and parole
Pennsylvania
IWW•by states 5: 0230
organization of black Americans 7:0176
People's Council of America
5:0309
Pepper, George Wharton
12: 0277; 13: 0001; 14:0001, 0155
Perkins, Frances
1:0769
Perry, Grover H.
7: 0227,0380; 8: 0001
Petersen, Arnold
4: 0687; 6: 0542
Petersen, William F.
6: 0286
Phelan, S. B.
5:0539
Phelps-Dodge Corporation
Bisbee, Arizona 7:0380
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
organization of black Americans 7:0176
raids 5:0230
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
labor conditions 5:0230
Plea bargains
IWW prosecution 4: 0931
PoUce
brutality 4:0246
raids 5:0539; 7: 0215,0287; 10: 0470,04990642
Polk, Frank L.
6: 0602; 11: 0001
Pollock, John C.
10:0000,0201; 12: 0001; 14: 0612; 15: 0001
Pollok, Anna C.
13:0001
Pollok, Theodora
5:1000; 6: 0000,0240,0407
see also Rhoads, Theodora Pollok
Porter, Claude R.
4:0387,0587,0597,0747,0931; 5:0230,0309,
0539,0968,1000; 6:0000,0240,0407,0536,
0649,0672,0679; 7:0167,0173,0208,0873;
8: 0001,0200,0465,0873,1136; 9: 0558,
0750,0863; 10:0000,0436,0457,0470;
12:0001
46
8:0001,0465,0873,1136; 9: 0000,0024,
0237; 10: 0499,0642
Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen
5:0101
lynching of Frank Little 5:0309,0937
Mooney and Billings case 1:0351,0562,0769,
0979,1054,1071; 2: 0001,0099,0299,0568,
0677,0748,0891; 3: 0001, 0342^0462, 0608,
1172,1191; 5:0539
Pollok case 6:0000,0240,0407
radical YMCA employee 6: 0637
speaking tour of William Z. Foster 7:0035
suppression of IWW in Centralia, Washington
5: 0799; 6: 0705,0918; 7: 0000,0078
Tulsa, Oklahoma, events 5:0025
U.S. treatment of IWW members 3: 0937;
4:0038; 5:0025; 6:0240; 7: 0248; 8: 0465,
0873; 9: 0024, 0237; 10: 0000, 0201, 0642,
0870; 13: 0001,0488,0546,0598, 0750,
0851, 0892; 14: 0001, 0155,0524
Providence, Rhode Island
IWW activities 7:0034
Publications
ACLU 14:0155
anarchist 5:0275
Butte, Montana, Daily Record 10: 0499-0864
Comintern 2: 0299
foreign language 6: 0642
International Workers Defense League 1: 0351,
0562,1132
IWW 1: 0000,0206,0351,1132; 3: 0937;
4: 0246,0387,0931,1037,1064,1247;
5: 0101,0230,0275, 0284, 0309,0539;
6: 0705,0918; 7: 0161,0173,0229, 0251,
0287,0380; 8:0001,0465,1136; 9: 0000,
0024,0863; 10: 0000, 0201; 11: 0001,0394,
0761; 12:0001; 13:0001,0892
Pravda 9:0237
Seattle, Washington, Union Record 6: 0705,
0918; 7:0248-0250
United Communist party 7: 0287
see also Propaganda
Public relations
IWW 9: 0684
Quigley, Edward
13:0598,0683
Quinlan, James
13:0690
Radical activities
4: 0326,0568; 6: 0637; 7: 0035; 10: 0499-0864
RadivoefT, Nicholas
7:0039,0251;10:0767
Raids
DOJ 4:0000,0326,0387,0657,0687,0931,
1037; 5:0018,0230,0275; 6:0542,0557,
0705; 7:0153,0161,0173; 8:0001,0200;
9: 0024,0237; 10: 0000, 0470
local poüce 5:0539; 7:0215,0287; 10: 0470,
0499-0642
Military Intelligence Division 6: 0672
Portland, Oregon
IWW activities 8:0861
IWW case 6:0634
Post, Louis F.
4:0246; 5:0309,1000; 7:0873; 8:0873,1136;
9:0024; 10:0201,0812,0870
Potthast, John
13:0582
Pravda
interview•William D. Haywood 9:0237
Presidency
see U.S. presidency
President's Mediation Commission
Bisbee, Arizona 7:0380,0873
DOJ cooperation with 4: 0230
Press
coverage of IWW trials 4:0387
Preston, John W.
4:0080; 5:1000; 6:0000,0240,0407,0536;
7:0148; 9:0684,0750; 13:0001; 14:0001,
0155
Price, James
7: 0067; 13:0892
Prisons
behavior of prisoners 11:0001-0761; 12:00010917; 13: 0001-0892; 14: 0001-0952
censorship of mail 6: 0286,0356; 9: 0024,0237;
12: 0370,0451,0491; 13: 0750,0856;
14:0001
conditions 5:1000; 6:0240,0286; 7:0078;
9:0750; 10:0000
insanity in 6: 0286
Workers National Prison Comfort Club 13:0750
see also Billings, Warren K.; Internment;
Mooney, Thomas J.
Private detective agencies
4:0080,0679,1037.1064; 5:0018,0539;
7:0165,0251; 9:0000; 10: 0457,0499,0711
Progressive Women's Council
2:0568
Propaganda
antiwar 7: 0245
IWW•Mexico 7: 0030
see cdso Publications
Protests against
Bisbee, Arizona, deportations 5:0025,0309;
7:0380-0873
DOJ raids 5:0018
Everett, Washington, massacre of IWW members
1:0000,0206
extradition of Alexander Beikman from New
York to California 1:0351
IWW activities 1: 0000; 3: 0937; 4: 0000,0038,
0057,0080,0230,0242,0246,0557,0568,
0661,0687,0747,0773,0784,0931,1012,
1023,1037; 5:0000,0004,0018,0025,0101,
0230,0284,0296,0309,0539,0799,0901,
0932,1000; 6: 0656,0679,0705,0918;
7:0072,0089,0164,0229,0380,0873;
47
Railroad Employées' Committee for the Release of
Thomas J. Mooney
3:0608
Railroad Workers Industrial Union
IWW4: 0387; 7: 0100, 0135-0142,0227
Rankin, Jeannette
6:0407
Ratnofsky, Louis
4:1037
Reames, Clarence L.
5:0309,0539, 0799; 6: 0356, 0679; 8:0001,
0465; 10: 0470
Recht, Charles
5:0230; 8: 0200,0873
Redfieid, William C.
5:0799; 7:0380
Religion and Labor Foundation
2:0677
Republican National Committee
1:0000
Rhoads, Theodora PoUok
13:0001
see also Pollok, Theodora
Rhode Island
IWW•by states 5:0275
IWW activities 7:0034
Rice, C. H.
12:0404
Richter, Herman
8: 0873
Ridgely, H. S.
10: 0870
Rimmer, Thomas
7:0094
Risley, Theodore G.
10: 0870
Roanoke, Virginia
remarks against President Wilson 6:0639
Robertson, Baldwin
10: 0499, 0642,0711,0767,0812,0864
Robertson, Fred
9:0863; 10: 0000,0201; 14:0524,0612,0902;
15:0001
Rowan, James H.
9: 0024; 10: 0870; 12: 0491
Rudkln, Frank H.
13: 0001,0750; 14:0001
Russia
see Soviet Russia
Rust, F. A.
6:0918
Sabotage
see Arson
Sacramento, California
grand juiy investigations•IWW 4:0080
IWW cases 5:1000; 6: 0000-0286,0407-0536;
9:0750; 12:0001,0323
St Elizabeth's Hospital
IWW prisoners 6:0286
St John, Vincent
5:0539; 8:0873; 9:0024,0237,0442; 11:0686
St Michael, Alaska
IWW cases 6:0356
Salter, Thomas J.D.
9:0237
Salt Lake City, Utah
IWW case 6:0672
San Diego, California
free speech movement 1:0000
Sandstrom, Elmer
5:0101
San Francisco, California
district attorney 1:0559; 9: 0684; 13:0001;
14:0155
IWW activities 7:0287; 12:0917
San Francisco Bay Area American Federation of
Freedom of Mooney and Billings 3:0608
Santilli, Vincent
13:0704
Sapper, Michael
14:0612,0952
Sargent, John G.
10:0870
Saunders, Robert C.
6: 0679,0705,0918; 10: 0470
Saville, M. E.
6:0602;9:0524
Scarlett, Sam
11:0761
Scott, Robert
6: 0407,0705,0918
Scranton, Pennsylvania
raids 5: 0230
Scully, Charles
4:1064
Seamen
IWW organization of 7: 0215
Seattle, Washington
IWW cases 6: 0356,0679,0705-0918; 7:0000,
0248-0250; 10: 0470
local police raids 5: 0539
mass meetings 6: 0672
The Minutemen of Seattle 5: 0309
Soviet Russian consulate 6: 0602-0632; 8:0861;
9:0544
Union Record 6:0705,0918; 7:0248-0250
Seattle District Defense Committee
IWW 5:0539; 10:0470
Sedition
see Espionage Act
Selective Service matters
see Antiwar and Selective Service matters
Seminóte County, Oklahoma
alleged assassination attempt 5:0025
Senior, Clarence
1:0769
Sessions, Alanson
7:0250
48
Spelling, Thomas C.
4:0747
Spokane, Washington
free speech movement 1:0000
IWW case 10:0457
Sprague, Myron
13:0737
Stanley, William
9:0442
Statistics
arson and fires in California 1:1132
IWW membership 1: 0000
Steffens, Lincoln
9:0524
Stenberg, Sigfried
11:0394
Stephens, William D.
1: 0351; 4:0080; 5:1000; 14:0155
Sterne, L. A.
4:1023
Stevenson, Archibald
13:0001
Stewart, Robert P.
8: 1136; 9: 0237; 10: 0201,0499,0767, 0812,
0870; 13: 0001; 14: 0612
Stewart, S. V.
10:0499
Stockton, Charles W.
4:1037
Stone, Harlan F.
5: 0799; 10: 0870
Street, Jane
4:0931
Street, Richard S.
14:0389
Strikes
1: 0206; 4: 0038,0080,0246, 0568,0687, 0747,
0776,1012,1064; 5: 0004,0101,0309, 0539,
0968; 6:0705,0918; 7: 0135-0142,0176,
0213,0227,0229,0287,0380, 0873; 9: 0558;
10:0457,0499-0711
Strong, Anna Louise
6:0356,0918
Stutter, Delmas C.
6: 0557
Supreme Court of California
Henshaw, F. W. 9: 0684
investigation of Mooney and Billings convictions
1:0769
Sweeney, Martin L.
2:0748
Tabib, Caesar
13: 0750,0851
Tacoma, Washington
IWW cases 6:0679
Taylor, John Thomas
5:0799
Tedrow, Harry B.
7:0153
Seymour, Augustus T.
12: 0001,0277,0507; 13: 0001,0361,0388,
0401,0436,0452,0470,0488,0516,0531,
0546,0568,0582,0598, 0690,0704,0737,
0750,0856,0875,0892; 14: 0001, 0155, 0612
Shasta County, California
immigrant labor and strikes at mines 4: 0080
Sheffield, Alabama
IWW case 6:0656
Sheridan, Don
12:0500
Shipbuilding workers
strikes 5:0101
Shipstead, Hendrik
14: 0524
Shipyard workers
IWW organization of 7:0215
Shorr, Isaac
12: 0547
Short, William
6:0705,0918
Silsbee, Frank J.
10: 0201
Silva, Frank M.
6:0286; 13:0001; 14:0155
Sinclair, Archibald R.
11: 0761; 12: 0507,0917
Sinclair, Upton
2:0001
Sioux City, Iowa
Agricultural Workers Industrial Union 1919
convention 4:0230
IWW 1919 convention 4:0587
Slovick, James
12:0547
Smelter workers
IWW 7: 0227
Smith, Elmer F.
6:0918
Socialist Labor party
4:0687; 6: 0542,0557
Socialist Party of America
1:0206,0769; 2:0891; 3: 0001,0342,0937;
4:0387; 5:0309,0937; 7: 0380; 13: 0683
Socialist Party of Mexico
3:0462
Solen, Robert
5:0968
South Dakota
IWW•by states 5:0284
Soviet Russia
consulate•Seattle, Washington 6:0602-0632;
8:0861; 9:0544
emigrants to 6:0602,0632; 7:0176; 9:0237,
0442,0544
Pravda 9:0237
proposed U.S. recognition of 3:0937
Young Men's Christian Association 6:0637
Spellacy, T. J.
10:0870
49
Tennessee
IWW•by states 5: 0292
Texas
IWW•by states 5:0296; 7:0215
IWW activities 7: 0141-0142,0229
Thompson, J. C.
9:0684
Thompson, J. Vance
7:0287
Thompson, James P.
12: 0563
Tighe, Ambrose
4: 0747
Tonopah, Nevada
strikes•mine workers 4:1012
Tori, Jacob
13: 0856
Townley, A. C.
5:0004
Tracy, Thomas
5: 0309,0968
Trade Union Unity Council
2:0099
Tresca, Carlo
8:0001,0200,0465,0873
Tucker, Irwin St. John
7:0380
Tulsa, Oklahoma
IWW organization of domestic workers 4:0931
protest against events in 5: 0025
Tumulty, Joseph P.
6:0407,0918; 7:0380; 8: 0465
Turner, John L.
12: 0572
Turner, Robert H.
11: 0001,0394; 13: 0001; 14: 0612
Twombly, Henry B.
6:0407
Union of Russian Workers
DOJ raids 4: 0326
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
see Soviet Russia
Union Record
Seattle, Washington 6: 0705,0918; 7: 0248-0250
Unions
American Federation of Labor 2:0001; 3:0608;
4:1023
Arizona State Federation of Labor 5:0309
Federated Moulders' (Metals) Union of Australia
2:0099
Great Britain 3: 0937
International Association of Machinists 6:0542
International Molders' Union of North America
2:0001; 3: 0001
International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter
Woikere 4:0687
International Workers Order 2: 0677,0748;
3:0608
National Labor Council 3:0462
protests against treatment of IWW members
10:0201
Railroad Employees' Committee for the Release
of Thomas J. Mooney 3:0608
Religion and Labor Foundation 2: 0677
Trade Union Unity Council 2:0099
Union of Russian Workers 4: 0326
U.S.•general 3:0937
Washington State Federation of Labor 1:0000
Western Federation of Miners 7: 0059
Woman's International Union Label League
6:0705
Workers Alliance of America 2:0299,0748
Workers' Defense Union 11: 0001
Working Class Union 5:0025
see also IWW; Local unions
United Communist party
publications 7:0287
Uphaus, Willard
2:0677
U.S. Army Department
suppression of IWW 5: 0539
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
decisions 9:0237,0442; 10:0201,0870;
14:0612
habeas corpus proceedings 2: 0099
hearings 9:0024
transcripts 12:0001,0580
U.S. Congress
amnesty proposals 11:0001,0686,0761;
12: 0277,0580; 14: 0001,0155, 0524
draft legislation 5: 0949; 6: 0661
protests•IWW activities 4: 0784,0931; 5: 0004,
0025,0309,0799,0901,0932,1000; 6: 0656;
7:0248; 8: 0001,1136; 9:0000; 10: 0499,
0870
protests•Mooney and Billings case 2:0099,
0299,0748; 3: 0608
Senate Judiciary Committee 5: 0949
U.S. Department of Agriculture
cooperation with DOJ 4:0246
U.S. Department of Commerce
cooperation with DOJ 4: 0661 ; 5:0799
VS. Department of Justice
see DOJ
VS. Department of Labor
cooperation with DOJ 4: 0246; 5:0309; 9: 0684;
10:0201,0812, 0870
DOJ cooperation with 4: 0687; 5:0539, 0799;
6:0286,0705; 7: 0039,0067
hearings•Immigration Service 7:0251
interest in Bisbee, Arizona 7:0380
U.S. Department of State
cooperation with DOJ 7:0030
DOJ cooperation with 4: 0387; 7:0094; 9:0024
U.S. Department of the Interior
cooperation with DOJ 5:0309
50
U.S. District Court
habeas corpus proceedings 2:0099
motions 10:0000,0201; 14: 0612
transcripts 9:0750; 15:0001
U.S. Forest Service
IWW activities 4:0246
U.S. Guards
use in labor disputes 10: 0499-0642
U.S. Navy Department
cooperation with DOJ 8:0465
general 8: 0001
Mare Island, California 9:0684
Naval Intelligence Division 5:0230,0539,0799;
9: 0544; 10: 0470
U.S. Post Office Department
bombings 4: 0387
censorship 3: 0937; 4:1023; 5: 0539; 6: 0642,
0705; 7:1125; 8:0465; 9:0000
cooperation with DOJ 8: 0200,0465; 10:0767
violation of regulations of 1:0769; 10:07110767
U.S. presidency
clemency for IWW prisoners 11: 0001-0761;
12: 0001-0917; 13: 0001-0892; 14: 00010952
elections•1936 2:0299
President's Mediation Commission 4: 0230;
7: 0380,0873
proposed recognition of Soviet Russia 3: 0937
remarks against 6: 0639
see also Clemency
U.S. Secret Service
requests for action by 4: 0073,0246
U.S. Shipping Board
general 8:0001
investigation of IWW activities 4: 0000
U.S. Supreme Court
certiorari denied 6:0286; 9: 0237; 10:0201
certiorari requested 9: 0024
U.S. Veterans Administration
IWW organization of hospital workers 7: 0143
U.S. War Department
censorship of mail 6:0286
cooperation with DOJ 8: 0465,0873; 9: 0863;
10:0499
general 8: 0001
list of IWW deportees 7:0380
see also Military Intelligence Division
Utah
IWW•by states 7:0227
IWW activities 1: 0000
IWW case-^Salt Lake City 6:0672
Valentine, Joseph F.
3:0001
Vanderveer, George F.
4:0387,0597,0931; 5:0539,0799,1000;
6: 0240,0536,0602,0918; 7: 0078,0173,
0229; 8:0200,0433,0465,0873; 9:0524,
0544,0558,0863; 10: 0000,0201
Veteran's organizations
American Legion 3:0608; 4:0057,0242,0246,
0568; 5:0230,0799; 6:0705,0918; 7:0000,
0078,0158;10:0201,0812
general 6:0705-0918; 7:0000
Grand Army of the Republic 6:0705
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States
6:0705
Vigilantes
Bisbee, Arizona 7: 0380-1125
veterans' organizations 6: 0705-0918; 7: 0000
see also Lynchings; Massacres
Violence and intimidation
bombings 4: 0387
labor disputes 10:0499,0711
police brutality 4:0246
see also Lynchings; Massacres
Virginia
remarks•Roanoke 6:0639
Voetter, George F.
13: 0875
Vorse, Mary Heaton
11:0001
Wagner, J. A.
9:0544
Wallace, Hugh C.
6:0602
Walla Walla, Washington
state penitentiary 7: 0078
Wallenberg, Axel
11:0394
Walling, William English
3:0937
Walsh, Frank P.
2:0001; 7:0173; 9:0544
Ward, Harry F.
12:0001
Warren, Charles
5: 0101,0309; 7: 0380
Washington State
free speech movement•Spokane 1: 0000
IWW•by states 5: 0309-0799; 7: 0229
IWW activities 1: 0000; 6:0968; 7: 0076,0100
IWW cases 5: 0968; 6: 0356,0679,0705-0918;
7: 0000,0078; 10: 0457-0470
massacre of IWW members•Everett 1: 0000,
0206
mass meetings•Seattle 6: 0672
Soviet Russian consulate 6:0602-0632; 8: 0861;
9:0544
state penitentiary 7:0078
Washington State Federation of Labor
1:0000; 6:0918
Weeks, Henry J.
5: 0101,0309
Weinberger, Harry
1:0351; 6: 0356; 8:0873; 9:0237; 11: 0001;
13:0683
Welnstock, Louis
2:0001
51
Weiss, Rose
9:0237
Wells Fargo & Company
cooperation with DOJ censorship 4:1037
Welsh, Francis Ralston
1:0769,0969,1170; 4:1037; 6: 0000; 9: 0024
West, George P.
8:0465
Western Federation of Miners
7:0059
Western states
labor problems 7:0380
see also Pacific Northwest
West Virginia
IWW•by states 5: 0899
Wetter, Pierce C.
12: 0001,0323,0507
Wheeler, Burton K.
4:0784; 5:0937; 7:0176; 10:0499
Wheeler, Harry C.
7:0380, 0873
White, Robe Carl
12:0507
Whlteside, George W.
8:0873
Whitney, Charlotte Anita
12: 0917
Wichita, Kansas
IWW case 4:0776; 5:1000; 9:0863; 10:00000436; 12: 0001; 14:0524-0952; 15:0001
Wickersham, George W.
1:0000
Willebrandt, Mabel Walker
9:0237; 12:0370
Williams, George
6:0918
Wilson, William B.
1:0351; 4: 0687; 6:0705; 7:0380; 8:0465
Wilson, Woodrow W.
1:0000,0351; 3:0937; 4:0687; 5:1000;
6:0407,0602,0639; 7: 0072,0380; 8:0465;
11:0001
Wisconsin
IWW•by states 5: 0901; 7:0245
IWW activities 1:0206
Socialist Party of Wisconsin 3: 0001
Woman's International Union Label League
6: 0705
Wood, C. E. S.
6:0356
Woodruff, Abner E.
7: 0380
Workers Alliance of America
2:0299,0748
Workers' Defense Union
11:0001
Workers National Prison Comfort Club
13:0750
Workers Socialist Publishing Company
Duluth, Minnesota 6:0642
Working Class Union
5:0025
Works Progress Administration
2:0748
World War I
antiwar activities 7:0229,0245
censorship 8:0433
Espionage Act matters 3:0937; 4:0653; 5:0101;
6: 0240,0356,0661,0918; 8: 0433,0465,
0861; 10:0499,0812; 11:0001,0394,0686;
12:0001,0277
internment of aliens 9:0863; 10:0201
list of possible IWW detainees 8:0433
pro-German matters 4:0387; 5:0025; 6:0602
state laws•arson 4:0784
strikes 5:0101
unpatriotic remarks 4:1012
U.S. Congress•draft legislation 5:0949
see also Antiwar and Selective Service matters
Wyoming
IWW•by states 5:0932
Yeager, Joseph
7:0059
Young Men's Christian Association
employees•Soviet Russia 6:0637
52
RESEARCH COLLECTIONS IN
AMERICAN RADICALISM
Department of Justice Investigative Files
Part I: The Industrial Workers of the World
Part H: The Communist Party
Records of the Subversive Activities
Control Board, 1950-1972
Part I: Communist Party USA
Part II: Communist-Action and
Communist-Front Organizations
BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES
Manuscript Collections from the Schomburg Center
for Research in Black Culture, The New York Library
Papers of the Civil Rights Congress
Papers of the International Labor Defense
Papers of the National Negro Congress
Newspapers of the American Communist Party
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
Research Collections in American Radicalism
General Editors:
Mark Naison and Maurice Isserman
r
^x
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
J
V
Part II.
The Communist Party
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
Research Collections in American Radicalism
General Editors:
Mark Naison and Maurice Isserman
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
Part II: The Communist Party
Edited by Mark Naison
Associate Editors
Paul Kesaris and Gregory Murphy
Guide compiled by
Martin Schipper
A microfilm project of
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
An Imprint of CIS
4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Department of Justice investigative files [microfilm].
p. cm. - (Research collections in American radicalism)
Accompanied by printed reel guides, compiled by Martin P. Schipper.
Includes indexes.
Contents: pt. 1. The Industrial Woikers of the World / edited by
Melvyn Dubofsky - pt 2. The Communist Party / edited by Mark Naison.
ISBN 1-55655-055-3 (microfilm : pt. 1)
ISBN 1-55655-056-1 (microfilm : pt. 2)
1. Industrial Workers of the World-History-Sources.
2. Communist Party of America-History-Sources. 3. United States.
Dept. of Justice-Archives. I. Schipper, Martin Paul.
II. Dubofsky, Melvyn, 1934- . III. Naison, Mark, 1946IV. United States. DepL of Justice. V. University Publications of
America (Firm) VI. Series.
[HD8055]
322'.2-dc20
90-12989
CIP
Copyright © 1989 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-056-1.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
v
Source Note
vii
Editorial Note
vii
Scope and Content Note
ix
Acronyms/Initialisms
xi
Reel Index
Reell
Straight Numerical File
Casefile 194416
Casefile 200656
Casefile 200724 ,
Casefile 201092
Casefile 201169
Reels 2-12
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General
Reel 13
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont
Casefile 202600•States
11
12
Reel 14
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•States cont
Casefile 202600•Subjects
14
16
Reels 15-23
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
16
Reel 24
Straight Numerical File•Previously Restricted Materials
Casefile 202600•General
Casefile 202600•States
Casefile 202600•Subjects
iii
41
44
45
Reel 25
Straight Numerical File•Previously Restricted Materials cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
45
Reel 26
Straight Numerical File
Casefde 203557
Casefile 203773
Casefile 204767
Casefile 205272
Casefile 205492
48
48
48
48
49
Reel 27
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 205492 cont
Casefile 206924
Casefile 207682
Casefile 209264
Casefile 212097
49
49
50
50
50
Classified Subject File
Casefile 9-5-1436
Casefile 9-12-695
Casefile 9-12-707
Casefile 9-12-728
Casefile 9-12-758
50
50
50
51
51
Reel 28
Classified Subject File cont.
Casefile 9-12-801
Casefile 9-19-375
Casefile 9-19-603
Casefile 9-19-1492
Casefile 9-19-1755
51
51
51
52
52
Subject Index
53
IV
INTRODUCTION
When the United States entered World War I, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) launched a campaign of
surveillance, infiltration, and prosecution of American radicals that would have a profound impact on the
political outlook of the American Left When the DOJ initiated this campaign, provoked by radical involvement
in protests against the war, the American Left was a vibrant and contentious mixture of organizations•
democratic, undisciplined, filled with rebellious spirit. Composed of immigrants and natives, farmers, workers
and intellectuals, it found organizational expression in two large groups, the Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW) and the Socialist party, which were decentralized in structure and which projected their views through
public, legal activity•strikes, marches, rallies, the dissemination of literature, and, in the case of the Socialist
party, election campaigns. The Justice Department's campaign of arrests and prosecutions, imitated with equal
fervor by state and city governments, made such open agitation difficult to sustain. Newspapers were
suppressed. Rallies were broken up. Headquarters were raided and organizational files seized. Key leaders were
j ailed. (The head of the IWW, William Hay wood, and the leader of the Socialist party, Eugene Debs, were both
imprisoned for anti-war activity.) The prosecutions not only weakened the Left's two strongest organizations,
but also helped change the organizational and philosophical outlook of American radicals. In particular it helped
set the stage for the rise of the American Communist party, a hierarchical, centralized organization, as the
dominant force on the American Left
The formation of the American Communist party was a long and convoluted process, orchestrated in large
part by Soviet leaders acting under the aegis of the Communist International (Comintern). It was the
International, acting at its Second World Congress, which set the rules by which all Communist parties were
to function, including the key precept of democratic centralism, i.e., that each level of a Communist party had
to accept, without reservations, the decisions of the level above it, with ultimate authority resting in the
International itself. But the willingness of many American radicals to join such a hierarchical body, one which
willingly followed the instructions of an international executive committee of revolutionaries, cannot solely be
understood on the basis of actions in Moscow. The American Communist party, as it finally took shape in the
early 1920s, represented a shaip, decisive break with the American radical past. People were willing to join it
not only because the Soviet revolution provided a new model of revolutionary action, but because the
Department of Justice prosecutions undermined the old one.
The DOJ prosecutions, particularly those launched late in 1919 and 1920 (known as the Palmer Raids)
crippled the legal agitational arms of radical organizations. The raids made it difficult for radicals to undertake
election campaigns and dangerous for them to hold marches, demonstrations, and rallies. The raids also made
it perilous to hand out leaflets during strikes, and they resulted in the suppression of radical newspapers and the
closing of organizational headquarters. But above all, the raids undermined the image of America as a
democratic political environment where Socialists could disseminate their ideas through traditional legal
channels and gradually achieve power through the democratic process. In short. Justice Department activities
seemed to suggest that the only way radicals could survive in America was by developing conspiratorial
methods of organization. The radicals would have to develop special structures to counteract prosecution,
infiltration, and government harassment And who better to instruct them in these techniques than the victorious
revolutionaries in the Soviet Union, who had built their movement in aczarist police state and had come to power
through a successful insurrection.
The Justice Department prosecutions that took place in nearly every state in the union did much to change
rough hewn, free-spirited radicals into the hardened cadre of a hierarchical movement By the time the Palmer
Raids had ended, Theodore Draper writes, "so many Communists were indicted over the country that everyone
in the movement regarded himself as [a] political prisoner or a fugitive from the law." Amidst thousands of
arrests and hundreds of deportations, many rank-and-fde activists were intimidated into inactivity. But the hard
core that remained learned to organize underground, communicate secretly, operate through small cells of
trusted individuals, and, above all, to look to Soviet leaders for guidance in building an organization that could
survive in such a hostile political climate.
When the Palmer Raids began, there were at least two American Communist parties claiming the sole mantle
of the Soviet revolution. Only the authority of the Communist International could force them to merge.
Moreover, so convinced were many American Communists that America was a police state (based on the
wounds inflicted by the Justice Department) that they refused to form a legal branch of the newly unified party.
It required Comintern intervention to get American Communists to form a legal Workers Party that would
publish a newspaper and sponsor election campaigns. But while the International pushed the American party
in the direction of legality, it also insisted on the retention of many conspiratorial features, including the
development of underground methods of communication between the International and the American party
based on codes, couriers, and plenipotentiary representatives, as well as techniques of illegally moving people
and funds across international borders.
These conspiratiorial fearures, along with the principles of democratic centralism, served to sharply
distinguish the Communist party from all previous radical groupings. No other radical party had its policies
monitored, and sometimes changed, by a political body located in another country. No other radical
organization had such an elaborate system of underground communication that included fake identities,
political pseudonyms, and forged passports, enabling people to move inside and outside the United States
incognito. But after watching the Justice Department cripple the IWW, weaken the Socialist party, and arrest
many leaders of the pro-Soviet Left, early Communists welcomed these innovations as the conditions of
political survival in a hostile country. Even when Justice Department activities became less aggressive in the
mid-1920s, key Communist leaders bore the scars of persecution; they felt Soviet guidance, and a centralized
political structure, gave them the strength to survive where other radicals failed.
There is a great irony here. Those who bemoan the rise to influence of a disciplined party of the Left, wedded
to conspiratorial methods of organization, must assign some responsibility to Justice Department prosecutions
that destroyed more freewheeling methods of radical opposition. Communists were made, not bom; the
destruction of democratic radical alternatives by government repression shaped their development as much as
the heady achievements of Bolsheviks on the ruins of the Russian Empire.
Mark Naison
Professor of Afro-American Studies and History
Fordham University
VI
SOURCE NOTE
The material contained in this micropublication has been reproduced from the holdings of the National
Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C. Department of Justice Investigative Files, Part II:
The Communist Party is part of Record Group 60, General Records of the Department of Justice.
EDITORIAL NOTE
The Department of Justice's records relating to the Communist movement fall into two parts. One is the
Straight Numerical Files, which comprise almost 95 percent of the collection, and the other is the Classified
Subject Files.
University Publications of America (UPA) made its selection of files for this collection after an extensive
search of archival indexes for Communist party publications. Communist party organizations, and names of
prominent members of the Communist Party of America.
vu
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE
The records of the U.S. Department of Justice that concern the activities of Communists and the Communist
party can be found in the Straight Numerical and Classified SubjectFiles of Record Group 60. This edition was
compiled following a systematic survey of the entire collection.
Straight Numerical Files
The straight numerical system of record keeping at the U.S. Department of Justice came into existence in
1904. This system assigned each case a six-digit number when it was opened. The Straight Numerical Files run
in numerical order on a case-by-case basis, regardless of the subject. This also means that the files run in rough
chronological order because each file was assigned a number higher than the previous file. The documents
within each section are arranged in reverse chronological order.
The overwhelming majority of the records in this microfilm collection can be found in the Straight Numerical
Files. The documents provide a first-hand account of Communist activities through correspondence, reports,
and memos of the Attorney General, U.S. attorneys, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (and also its
predecessor, the Bureau of Investigation), state and local officials, and various Communist and non-Communist
organizations and individuals. These records deal with a myriad of topics that reflect the period from World War
I to World War II. These topics include the following: Communist activities; world-wide Communist and antiCommunist activities; the formation of Utopian colonies; the Communist Party of the United States of America
(CPUSA) election campaigns; propaganda efforts; union organization; May Day activities; protests against the
Sacco-Vanzetti and Scottsboro boys' prosecutions; Communist activities among the black community;
investigations and raids by the U.S. Department of Justice; and protests against pro-German and fascist
activities. The cases include such Communist-related organizations as the Young Communist League; the
International Labor Defense (ILD); National Committee of the Foreign Bom; International Workers Order
(IWO); American League Against War and Fascism; the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter
Workers; and the Workers' Ex-Servicemen's League. The cases involved such individuals as John Reed,
Gregory Weinstein, William Z. Foster, Earl Browder, Morris Hillquit, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, Harry Bridges,
Vito Marcantonio, Emma Goldman, Marcus Garvey, and Louis C. Fraina.
Classified Subject Files
The classified subject system of recordkeeping at the U.S. Department of Justice came into existence in 1914.
The Classified Subject Files are arranged by a subject-numeric system. This system uses a numerical file
designation usually made up of various parts separated by dashes. The primary classes usually represent a
federal law or administrative subject, and each class is symbolized by a number that constitutes the first part
of the file designation. The primary class number is followed by a secondary number that further groups the
record. The third part of a numerical file designation is known as a consecutive subnumber. This subnumber
represents the particular case and indicates its sequence. The exclusive primary class number for the records
relating to Communists is 9; the subject file involves World War I matters.
The Classified Subject Files of these records only involve particular individuals, organizations, and
publications. Unlike the Straight Numerical Files in the U.S. Department of Justice's Communist collection,
which has much material concerning the depression and its effects and the rise of fascism, these particular
records are concentrated in the period from 1918 to 1926.
IX
The documents in the Classified Subject Files provide a first-hand account of the activities of various subjects
through correspondence, reports, and memos of the Attorney General, U.S. attorneys, the Bureau of Investigation, state and local officials, and various individuals. The records microfilmed in this series concern the antiwar movement of 1918, Espionage Act violations, freedom of speech issues, radical activities among women,
American visitors to the Soviet Union, and the Rand School of Social Science. Benjamin Gitlow, Kate Richards
O'Hare, and Rose Paste»- Stokes are some of the individuals mentioned in these files.
Previously Restricted Material
Both the Straight Numerical and Classified Subject files of Record Group 60 contain enclosures known as
Previously Restricted Material. As the name implies, these are records that were not available when these files
were first opened for research. Most of these records were restricted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation
because they were related to investigations by that bureau and the Bureau of Investigation. These records were
later re-examined and released and can be found at the end of the case file of which they were originally a part.
ACRONYMS/INITIALISMS
The following acronyms/initialisms are used frequently in this guide and are reproduced here for the convenience of the
researcher.
CPUS A
Communist Party of the United States of America
ILD
International Labor Defense
IWO
International Workers Order
IWW
Industrial Workers of the World
TUEL
Trade Union Educational League
TUUL
Trade Union Unity League
USSR
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
XI
REEL INDEX
Entries in this index refer to specific cásenles in the Department of Justice Investigative Files, Part II: The Communist
Party. This edition includes material from the Straight Numerical and Classified Subject Files of the Department of Justice
from the holdings of the National Archives in Washington, D.C. Entries contain the cásenle number and folder or section
number, if more than one. Entries also show the span of years within a casefile, folder, or section number, as well as the
number of pages included. In the in terestof accessing the material, this index indicates people and subjects, listed in the order
of appearance on the microfilm. The initials n.a. indicate that information is not available. The four-digit numbers on the
left of each page represent the frame numbers on the microfilm where cásenles or section numbers begin.
Reell
Frame
Straight Numerical File
Casefile 194416
0001
1919-1920.27pp.
People: Santeri Nuorteva; Carl Sandburg; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subjects: Financial matters; Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; propaganda efforts.
Casefile 200656
0028
1919-1920.28pp.
People: Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subjects: Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; mass meetings.
Casefile 200724
0056
1919.6pp.
People: Margaret Prevey; Eugene V. Debs; John Reed; James Larkin.
Subject: General strike plans.
Casefile 201092
0062
Section 1. 1919-1920. 390pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Russian immigrants.
0452
Section 2. 1920-1921.272pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Russian immigrants; anti-Semitism; emigrants to Soviet Russia.
0724
Section 3. 1920-1924.91pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Russian immigrants; deportations; emigrants to Soviet Russia.
Casefile 201169
0815
Section 1. 191^-1920.254pp.
People: Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Gregory Weinstein; Abram A. Heller; Santeri Nuorteva.
Subjects: Russian Soviet Goveinment Bureau officials; deportations; propaganda efforts; union
organization; IWW; police brutality; commercial relations with Soviet Russia; U.S. Congress
resolutions; Russian Soviet Government Bureau request for property rights to property of the
Russian government in the United States.
1
Frame
1069
1142
Section 2.1920-1923.73pp.
People: Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subjects: Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; deportations; anti-Communist
activities in the United States.
Section 2. Previously Restricted Materials. 1923. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subjects: Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; deportations.
Reel 2
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General
0001
Section 1. 1918-1919.215pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; IWW; union organization; U.S. Congress resolutions;
anti-Bolshevik legislation in South Africa; U.S. Congress legislation; mass meetings of the
Socialist Party of New York.
0216
Section 2. 1919-1920. 248pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: U.S. Congress legislation; anti-Communist activities; National Popular Government
League; public reaction to Committee of Distinguished Members of the American Bar "Report
upon the Illegal Practices of the U.S. Department of Justice"; IWW; deportations; U.S.
Congress resolutions.
0464
Sections 1 and 2. Previously Restricted Materials. 1919-1920. 8pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Deportations; anti-Communist activities in the United States; U.S. Congress
resolutions; IWW.
0472
Section 3. 1920. 360pp.
People: Arnold Peterson.
Subjects: Deportations; anti-Communist activities; Socialist Labor Party of America; IWW;
Russian immigrants.
0666
Section 3. Previously Restricted Materials. 1920.166pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: U.S. Congress Resolutions; propaganda efforts; IWW; Modem School Association of
North America; Russian immigrants; deportations; financial matters.
0832
Section 4. 1920. 149pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities in the United States; deportations; Russian immigrants,
Second Congress of the Comintern; Americanization work of the Young Men's Christian
Association; anti-revolutionary legislation in the Netherlands.
Reel 3
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 5. 1921-1930.295pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Norway; Young Pioneers of America; anti-Communist
activities; radical publications in Panama; Communist activities in Germany, France, and the
Netherlands; radical publications in Yugoslavia; International Union of Food and Drink
Workers; TUEL; International Red Aid; Profintem; CPUSA publications; IWW; Communist
Frame
0296
0386
0517
0623
0880
activities in Finland; Commonwealth College; emigrants to Soviet Russia; Sacco-Vanzetti case;
International Entente Against the Third International; Communist activities in Russia and San
Salvador; Workers (Communist) Party of America; Communist activities in Estonia; resolutions of the executive of the Comintern.
Section 5. Previously Restricted Materials. 1921-1930.90pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Leon Trotsky; Luigi Galliani.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; executive bureau of the Profintem; CPUS A publications;
union organization; TUUL; Communist activities in Soviet Russia and China; IWW; Commonwealth College; anarchist bombings.
Section 6. 1930. 131pp.
People: Paul J. Smith; William Z. Foster; Fred H. Fljozdal.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; U.S. Congress resolutions; violence in labor disputes;
Southern Organizing Campaign of the American Federation of Labor; United Textile Workers
of America; Communist activities in Finland and Mexico; CPUSA; Profintem; Comintern;
Young Communist League; general strikes; union organization; financial matters; Brotherhood
of Maintenance of Way Employees; Young Pioneers of America; mass meetings.
Section 7. 1930.106pp.
People: Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Russian immigrants; propaganda efforts; TUUL;
unemployment; union organization; ILD; Fascist activities in Germany; International Entente
Against the Third International; Young Pioneers of America; Young Communist League; May
Day activities; general strikes; mass meetings; Communist activities in Greece.
Section 8. 1930. 257pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: CPUSA election campaigns; anti-Communist activities; Utopian societies; antisubversive legislation in Italy; U.S. Congress Committee to Investigate Communist Activities;
Communist activities in Australia; Fascist activities; Communist activities in Ecuador and
Chile; TUUL; union organization; unemployment; Communist activities in Paraguay; divorce
laws in Cuba; Russian immigrants; propaganda efforts; Young Pioneers of America; prohibition laws in Finland; antiwar policy of the Comintern; Communist activities in Cuba; deportations; ILD; mass meetings; Emergency Committee for Southern Political Prisoners; Fascist
activities in Germany.
Section 9. 1930-1931.226pp.
People: Hey wood Broun.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; U.S. Congress Committee to Investigate Communist
Activities; Communist activities in Ecuador; Hungarian immigrants; publications; unemployment; mass meetings; Russian immigrants; Communist activities in Soviet Russia and
Germany; Young Pioneers of America; union organization; deportations; Communist activities
in Argentina; anti-Communist laws of Australia; anti-Fascist activities in Italy; anti-Communist
laws in Estonia and Lithuania; Communist activities in Austria and the Netherlands.
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 10. 1931.256pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Germany; anti-Communist activities; publications; mass
meetings; TUUL; union organization; Amtorg Trading Corporation; anti-Communist laws of
India; American Civil Liberties Union; Commonwealth College; International Fellowship of
Reconciliation; unemployment; Russian immigrants; American technical experts in Soviet
Russia; propaganda efforts.
Frame
0257
0448
0658
0872
1023
Section 11.1931.191pp.
People: Matthew Woll; Earl Browder.
Subjects: Unemployment; Communist activities in Great Britain; union organization; strikes;
Young Communist League; antiwar movement; Communist activities in Argentina; ILD;
publications; Hays Bureau; race relations; National Farmers Union; anti-Communist laws in
Persia.
Section 12. 1931.210pp.
People: Morris Hillquit; Harry Laidler; Algernon Lee; Clarence Senior.
Subjects: Association for Better Citizenship; CPUSA election campaigns; union organization;
Communist activities in Great Britain; mass meetings; agricultural workers; United Farmers
League of America; ILD; protests against political prisoners in the United States and the
prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys; TUUL; anti-Communist laws and Communist activities in
Costa Rica; Office of Naval Intelligence report on Communist activities; Communist and antiCommunist activities in Australia; labor troubles and Communistic tendencies of labor organizations in Spain; Fourth Congress of the Socialist Workmen's International.
Section 13.1931.214pp.
People: Clarence A. Hathaway.
Subjects: Young Communist League; educational programs; United Farmers League of
America; union organization; agricultural workers; Young Communist League of Australia;
Communist activities in Germany; protests against the prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys;
Communist activities in Canada; anti-Communist laws in Ireland; Communist activities among
black Americans; anti-Communist laws in Costa Rica; Communist activities in Latvia;
Comintern; USSR military buildup; Communist and anti-Communist activities in Greece;
TUUL; Workers International Relief; National Miners Union; Communist and anti-Communist
activities in Poland.
Section 14. 1931. 151pp.
People: Lillian Lynch; Paul Baum.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Communist activities in Chile and Peru; Friends of the
Soviet Union; Communist activities among black Americans; union organization; strikes;
unemployment; ILD; propaganda efforts; anti-Communist laws in Canada; deportations;
antiwar movement; anti-Communist activities in Germany; anti-Communist laws in Ireland;
International Red Aid.
Section 14. Previously Restricted Materials. 1931. 59pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Charles Kuntz.
Subjects: Federation of Liberal Precinct Clubs of America; Russian immigrants; ILD; National
Miners Union; union organization; mass meetings; antiwar movement; propaganda efforts; unemployment; treason prosecutions; colonization of Jews in Biro-Bidzan-Soviet Russia; antiCommunist laws in Ireland.
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 15. 1932. 200pp.
People: Roger N. Baldwin; Robert W. Dunn; Michael Gold; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn.
Subjects: Anti-Communist laws in Canada; mass meetings; unemployment; union organization;
TUUL; publications; antiwar movement; Communist and anti-American activities in Honduras;
Communist activities in Uruguay; Comintern; Amtorg Trading Corporation; Fascist activities;
Prisoners' Relief Fund of the ILD; National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners;
propaganda efforts; U.S. Congress legislation; Communist activities in Panama; Communist
activities and anti-Communist laws in Great Britain; anti-Communist activities; anti-Communist
laws in Luxembourg; U.S. Congress Committee to Investigate Communist Activities; Socialist
Party of America publications; colonization of Jews in Biro-Bidzan-Soviet Russia; Communist
Frame
0201
0215
0443
0638
0871
and anti-Communist activities in Latvia; Communist activities in the Philippines; Russian
immigrants; deportations; American visitors to the USSR.
Section 15. Previously Restricted Materials. 1932.14pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Communist activities among black and Japanese Americans.
Section 16.1932.228pp.
People: Anna Damon.
Subjects: Publications; Council of Working Class Women; unemployment; mass meetings;
union organization; National Textile Workers Union; antiwar movement; Anti-Imperialist
League of the United States; Young Pioneers of America; strikes; International Entente Against
the Third International; anti-Communist activities; anti-Communist laws in Canada; economic
development in the USSR; American technical advisors in the USSR; Young Communist
League; Comintern; deportation of Communists from Argentina; anti-Communist laws and
Communist activities in Guatemala; Fourth Congress of the Second International; Fascist
activities in Italty; anti-Fascist activities in Germany; economic conditions in Austria.
Section 17. 1932. 195pp.
People: William Z. Foster; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Publications; union organization; CPUSA election campaigns; anti-Communist laws
and Communist activities in the Netherlands; mass meetings; strikes; labor problems and
unemployment in Mexico; Communist activities among black Americans; cooperative movement; Comintern; Fascist and Communist activities in Germany; antiwar movement; unemployment; Russian immigrants; Communist activities in Poland; anti-Communist activities;
May Day demonstrations; International Communist Women's Day; anti-Communist activities
in Latvia; Communist activities in Guatemala; Communist activities in Czechoslovakia;
Communist activities in Honduras; International Red Aid.
Section 18. 1932 [and 1934]. 231pp.
People: Robert Minor.
Subjects: Publications; Fascist activities in Germany; anti-Communist activities; mass
meetings; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys; educational matters; unemployment; Young Communist League; private detective agencies; theft of weapons from U.S. Navy
vessels; propaganda efforts; Amtorg Trading Corporation; Russian immigrants; Anti-War
Congress held in the Netherlands; Communist activities in Sweden; Communist activities
among black Americans; Socialist activities in Canada; anti-Communist laws in El Salvador;
CPUSA election campaigns; antiwar movement; Communist activities in Lithuania; Bonus
Army; ILD; TUUL.
Section 19. 1932. 193pp.
People: Ada Wright; J. Louis Engdahl.
Subjects: Mass meetings; publications; anti-Communist activities; Finnish immigrants;
Communist activities in Czechoslovakia; union organization; CPUSA election campaigns;
unemployment; Comintern; strikes; Communist activities among black Americans; Communist
activities and anti-Communist laws in Argentina; Communist activities and anti-Communist
laws in the Philippines; Communist and anti-Communist activities inPinland; Profintem; antiCommunist activities in Latvia and Belgium; TUUL; United Mine Workers of America;
Progressive Mine Workers of America; ILD; Fascist activities in Germany; anti-Communist
laws in Trinidad; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys; Communist activities in
Uruguay; anti-Communist laws in Canada.
Reel 6
Straight Numérica! File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 20. 1932-1933.289pp.
People: Ralph M. Easley; Matthew Woll.
Frame
0290
0594
0775
0945
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Amtorg Trading Corporation; U.S. Congressional Committee to Investigate Communist Activities; publications; Communist activities in Spain; mass
meetings; Communist activities in Latvia; Comintern; CPUSA internal organization and
membership statistics; TUUL; antiwar movement; Communist activities in Ireland; Bonus
Army; unemployment; Communist activities among black Americans; emigrants to the USSR;
living conditions in the USSR; Communist activities in Lithuania, Haiti, and the Philippines;
Russian immigrants; Friends of the Soviet Union.
Section 21. 1933. 304pp.
People: Diego Rivera; Donald P. Fina.
Subjects: Fascist activities; National Shoe and Leather Workers' Union; strikes; Communist
youth activities in Central and South America; Communist activities in Spain; Comintern
appeal against Fascism; Communist activities in Belgium; anti-Communist activities; mass
meetings; publications; union organization; Railway Labor Executives Association; Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America; USSR relations with Egypt; War Resistors League; May
Day slogans; anti-Communist laws and deportations in Argentina; cooperative movement;
Communist activities among black Americans; Communist activities in Poland; CPUSA
internal organization; anti-Communist laws in France; National Miners Union; anti-Communist
laws in Finland; Communist activities in Sweden and Hungary; antiwar movement; ILD;
protest against the prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys.
Section 22. 1933. 181pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Farmers National Committee for Action; anti-Communist activities; mass meetings;
strikes; union organization; Communist propaganda in the Netherlands; European Anti-Fascist
Congress; publications; unemployment; Russian immigrants; propaganda efforts; Communist
activities of Japanese students in China; Profintem anti-Fascist activities; Young Communist
League; antiwar movement; Communist activities in Lithuania; Communist activities among
black Americans; Fascist activities in Italy; Continental Congress of Workers and Farmers;
anti-Communist laws in Germany.
Section 23. 1933. 170pp.
People: Ralph M. Easley; William W. Weinstone; Jack Johnson; Harry Haywood.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; strikes; Communist publications in Latvia; International
Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators, and Paperhangers of America; U.S. recognition of the
USSR; Fascist activities in Germany; Amtorg Trading Corporation; National Student League;
strikes; Comintern; CPUSA; antiwar movement; union organization; Communist activities
among black Americans; TUUL; International Red Aid; Communist activities in Cuba; mass
meetings.
Section 24. 1933-1934. 296pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Progressive Mine Workers of America; union organization; U.S. recognition of the USSR; mass meetings; Fascist activities in the United States;
unemployment; Young Communist League; publications; Comintern; anti-Communist laws in
Poland.
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont,
0001
Section 25. 1934. 135pp.
People: William Z. Foster; Ralph M. Easley; Matthew Woll.
Subjects: Union organization; ILD; anti-Communist activities; Young Communist League;
mass meetings; antiwar movement; publications; U.S. recognition of the USSR; Comintern;
strikes; Fascist activities and anti-Semitism; Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York;
unemployment; strikes; Communist activities among black Americans; United Mine Workers
of America; CPUSA election campaigns.
Frame
0136
0385
0525
0781
0958
Section 26. 1934.249pp.
People: Huey P. Long; William Dudley Pelley.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Fascist activities; Communist activities among black
Americans; union organization; Share Croppers Union; ILD; CPUS A internal organization;
Comintern; unemployment; Utopian societies; mass meetings; protests against prosecution of
the Scottsboro Boys; United Farmers League of America; strikes; strikebreaking; U.S. recognition of the USSR; CPUSA election campaigns; antiwar movement; Young Communist League.
Section 27. 1934. 140pp.
People: William L. Patterson; Simon J. Lubin.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; union organization; unemployment; mass meetings; May
Day; Utopian societies; Fascist activities and anti-Semitism; strikebreaking; ILD; Communist
activities among black Americans; protests against prosecution of Angelo Hemdon; National
Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners; Young Communist League; agricultural
workers; United Mine Workers of America; Farmers Holiday Movement; strikes.
Section 28. 1934. 256pp.
People: William L. Patterson.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; union organization; agricultural workers; May Day;
unemployment; ILD; IWO; Communist activities among black Americans; Utopian societies;
Federal Emergency Relief Administration workers.
Section 29.1934. 157pp.
People: William L. Patterson; Matthew Woll.
Subjects: Union organization; agricultural workers; strikes; anti-Communist activities; Utopian
societies; anti-Semitic activities; unemployment; ILD; protests against prosecution of Angelo
Hemdon; publications; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; Fascist activities; mass meetings; National Committee for Protection of Foreign Bom.
Section 30. 1934. 144pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Comintern; Communist activities among black Americans; strikes; antiwar movement; IWO; publications; Young Communist League; protests
against prosecution of Angelo Hemdon; ILD; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro
Boys; Communist activities in the Philippines; Fascist activities; American League Against
War and Fascism; anti-Communist laws in Poland; Communist activities in Finland; industrial
unionism.
Reel 8
StraigM Numerical File cont
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 31.1934.207pp.
People: Paul Crouch; Donald Henderson; John Green.
Subjects: Communist activities among black Americans; mass meetings; publications; antiCommunist activities; union organization; strikes; unemployment; antiwar movement; CPUSA
eighth national convention; International Typographical Union of North America; Federal
Emergency Relief Administration workers; Fascist activities; Cigarmaker's International
Union; CPUSA election campaigns; cooperative movement; U.S. Congress Committee on UnAmerican Activities.
0208
Section 32. 1934. 181pp.
People: Israel Amter; Carl Brodsky.
Subjects: U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; U.S. Congress legislation;
International Ladies Garment Workers Union; anti-Communist activities; CPUSA election
campaigns; Friends of the Soviet Union; Fascist activities; unemployment; antiwar movement;
mass meetings; Communist activities among black Americans; union organization; strikes;
agricultural workers; deportations; publications; Comintern; International Red Aid; Communist
Frame
0389
0588
0608
0810
1017
activities in Mexico; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys; cooperative movement; textile workers; ILD; Associated Farmers of California; National Miners Union; Marine
Workers Industrial Union; Metal Workers Industrial League; Tampa Tobacco Woikers Industrial Union; National Textile Workers Union; TUUL.
Section 33.1934.199pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Fascist activities; strikebreaking; ILD; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro
Boys; deportations; Associated Farmers of California; unemployment; anti-Communist
activities; Nature Friends of America; mass meetings; antiwar movement; American League
Against War and Fascism; publications; CPUS A election campaigns; anti-Communist laws in
Michigan; activities of Croatian nationalists in Yugoslavia and the United States; German
activities in Africa; race riots; discrimination against Filipino and black Americans.
Section 33. Previously Restricted Materials. 1934.20pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Earl Browder; Israel Amter.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Communist activities among black Americans; Fascist
activities in the United States.
Section 34. 1934-1935. 202pp.
People: Charles E. Coughlin; Upton Sinclair.
Subjects: American League Against War and Fascism; anti-Communist activities; publications;
Fascist and anti-Semitic activities; protests against prosecution of Angelo Hemdon; unemployment; Associated Farmers of California; deportations; Communist activities among black
Americans; Communist activities in Japanese-occupied China; Young Communist League;
antiwar movement; TUUL; Profintem; mass meetings; protests against prosecution of the
Scottsboro Boys; ILD; union organization; Fur Workers Industrial Union; activities of Croatian
nationalists in Yugoslavia and the United States; Friends of the Soviet Union; radio broadcasts.
Section 35. 1935. 207pp.
People: Benjamin C. Marsh; Florence Kelley.
Subjects: Commonwealth College; anti-Communist activities; Communist activities among
black Americans; mass meetings; protests against prosecution of Angelo Hemdon; Progressive
Mine Workers of America; Friends of the Soviet Union; publications; Fascist activities; U.S.
Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; unemployment; Child Labor Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution; ILD; American League Against War and Fascism; union organization;
United Textile Workers of America; Young Communist League; U.S. Congress legislation;
Associated Farmers of California; deportations; radio broadcasts.
Section 36.1935. 184pp.
People: Benjamin Marsh; Charles E. Coughlin; Powers Hapgood; William Randolph Hearst
Subjects: U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; U.S. Congress legislation;
anti-Communist activities; Fascist activities; strikes; United Mine Workers of America; United
Anthracite Miners of Pennsylvania; American technical advisors in the USSR; Comintern;
CPUSA internal organization and publications; ILD; deportations; union organization; Marine
Workers Industrial Union; TUUL; Communist activities among black Americans; CPUSA
election campaigns; League for Industrial Democracy; motion pictures; strikebreaking;
American League Against War and Fascism.
Straight Numerical File comiL
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 37. 1935. 147pp.
People: Anna Damon; Charles E. Coughlin; William Randolph Hearst.
Subjects: U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; U.S. Congress legislation;
American League Against War and Fascism; anti-Communist activities; ILD; unemployment;
publications; CPUSA eighth national convention; antiwar movement; Highlander Folk School;
Frame
0148
0370
0601
0835
TUUL; United Anthracite Miners of Pennsylvania; strikes; race riots; Communist activities
among black Americans; Young Communist League; Utopian societies; American Civil
Liberties Union; Friends of the Soviet Union; IWO.
Section 38. 1935.222pp. [file folder filmed at frame 0234]
People: Robert Morss Lovett; Harry Bridges; Francis E. Townsend; John Keracher.
Subjects: U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; U.S. Congress legislation;
League for Industrial Democracy; anti-Communist activities; unemployment; deportations; May
Day; American League Against War and Fascism; antilynching bill; strikes; union organization;
publications; Proletarian Party of America; antiwar movement; Utopian societies; labor strikes,
riots, and Communist activities in the West Indies.
Section 39.1935.231pp.
People: William Randolph Hearst; Frank Farley; Robert Minor; Earl Browder.
Subjects: Anti-Semitic activities; publications; anti-Communist activities; Communist activities
among black Americans; Young Communist League; antiwar movement; Comintern; union
organization; Socialist International; May Day; mass meetings; Highlander Folk School.
Section 40. 1935. 234pp.
People: William Randolph Hearst; Harry Bridges.
Subjects: Fascist activities; agricultural workers; Farmers National Educational Association;
publications; antiwar movement; Share Croppers Union; unemployment; anti-Communist
activities; union organization; mass meetings; anti-Semitic activities; Socialist Labor Party of
America; ILD; Communist activities and union organization in Canada; Young Communist
League; protests against prosecution of Angelo Hemdon; American League Against War and
Fascism; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; U.S. Congress legislation;
deportations.
Section 41. 1935. 202pp.
People: John Fitzpatrick; William Randolph Hearst
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; anti-Semitism; Fascist activities; antiwar movement;
American League Against War and Fascism; unemployment; U.S. Congress legislation; union
organization; publications; Labor Day; mass meetings; American Federation of Labor; deportations; Works Progress Administration workers; Fascist activities in Italy and Ethiopia.
Reel 10
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 42. 1935. 164pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Publications; Communist activities among black Americans; anti-Communist activities; Fascist activities; anti-Semitic activities; mass meetings; Friends of the Soviet Union;
California Conference for Repeal of the Criminal Syndicalism Act; strikes; ILD; Progressive
Mine Workers of America; union organization; Farmers National Committee for Action;
American visitors to the USSR.
0165
Section 43. 1935-1936. 195pp.
People: George Dimitroff; William Dudley Pelley.
Subjects: Publications; antiwar movement; Farmer-Labor party; anti-Communist activities;
Fascist activities; union organization; Young Communist League; Fascist activities in Germany;
anti-Semitism; mass meetings; unemployment; radio broadcasts; protests against prosecution of
Angelo Hemdon; Socialist Labor Party of America.
0360
Section 44. 1936. 173pp.
People: H. L. Mitchell; Moissaye J. Olgin.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; unemployment; mass meetings; publications; radio
broadcasts; Fascist activities; anti-Semitism; Southern Tenant Farmers Union; union organization; CPUSA election campaigns; Communist activities in Sweden; Communist activities in
China.
Frame
0533
0732
Section 45. 1936. 199pp.
People: William Randolph Hearst; Juan Vicente Gomez.
Subjects: Discrimination against Japanese-Americans; publications; union organization; antiCommunist activities; Utopian societies; cooperative movement; anti-Communist laws in the
West Indies; antiwar movement; anti-Communist laws in the District of Columbia, Venezuela,
and Estonia; anti-Communist activities in Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay; laws of the USSR.
Section 46. 1936. 299pp.
People: William Dudley Pelley; Jose Marti.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Fascist activities; anti-Semitism; publications; union
organization; mass meetings; Puerto Rican nationalists; Haymarket Square martyrs; Young
Communist League; antiwar movement; Associated Office and Professional Emergency
Employees; U.S. Congress investigations.
Reel 11
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 47. 1936. 194pp.
People: Earl Browder; Norman Thomas; John L. Lewis.
Subjects: Fascist activities; anti-Communist activities; anti-Communist laws in the Dominican
Republic; publications; unemployment; IWO; Communist activities among black Americans;
mass meetings; CPUSA election campaigns; radio broadcasts; Socialist Party of America;
Committee for Industrial Organization; union organization; Spanish Civil War.
0195
Section 48. 1936-1937. 161pp.
People: John L. Lewis; Gerald L. K. Smith.
Subjects: Committee for Industrial Organization; publications; Commonwealth College; antiCommunist activities in the United States; Fascist activities in the United States; union organization; anti-Semitism; U.S. Congress investigations.
0356
Section 49. 1937. 163pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Fred Briehl.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Vigilantes and Affiliated Organizations; Works Progress
Administration workers; publications; union organization; Committee for Industrial Organization; Fascist activities; Spanish Civil War; Steel Workers Organizing Committee; discrimination against black Americans; anti-Communist laws in Peru; May Day; Socialist Party of
America; antiwar movement; mass meetings; Young Communist League; radio broadcasts.
0519
Section 50. 1937. 199pp.
People: Martin Luther Thomas; James W. Ford.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Fascist activities; mass meetings; nationalization of fiber
production in Mexico; Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America; IWO; union organization;
labor troubles in Trinidad; radio broadcasts; Vigilantes and Affiliated Organizations; antiwar
movement; anti-Communist laws in Ceylon; Work Projects Administration workers; Comintern; publications; Communist activities among black Americans.
0718
Section 51. 1937-1938. 189pp.
People: Martin Luther Thomas.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; deportations; IWO; Ukrainian separatist movement;
publications; Fascist activities.
0907
Section 52. 1938. 151pp.
People: Martin Luther Thomas.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; May Day; mass meetings; Ukrainian separatist movement; publications; Socialist Labor Party of America; union organization; anti-Communist laws
in Hungary; CPUSA membership statistics; radio broadcasts; Fascist activities.
10
Frame
Reel 12
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 53.1938.101pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; Moissaye J. Olgin.
Subjects: Anti-communist activities; New York state legislative investigations; publications;
Comintern; Fascist activities; CPUSA conference in New York; CPUSA internal organization
and membership statistics; Communist activities among black Americans.
0102
Section 54. 1938-1939.205pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Ukrainian separatist movement; anti-Semitism; Fascist
activities; radio broadcasts; anti-Communist laws in Switzerland; U.S. Congress Committee on
Un-American Activities; mass meetings; publications; Socialist Party of America; World Youth
Congress meeting on campus of Vassar College; United Federal Workers of America.
0307
Section 55. 1939. 150pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Martin Luther Thomas; Earl Browder; Heywood Broun; S. N. Spry.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; radio broadcasts; Fascist activities; Spanish Civil War;
CPUSA fund-raising efforts; American Communications Association; union organization; U.S.
Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; CPUSA election campaigns; Friends of the
Soviet Union; Amtorg Trading Corporation; CPUSA internal organization; publications.
0457
Section 56. 1939. 150pp. [file folder omitted]
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; publications; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American
Activities; U.S. Congress legislation; deportations; Ukrainian separatist movement; Fascist
activities; conference of the Department of the Treasury, U.S. Department of State, and U.S.
Department of Justice regarding investigations of espionage and subversive activities; American Legion; Spanish Civil War; Abraham Lincoln Brigade; antiwar movement; motion picture
celebrities; Communist activities in Canada; anti-Semitism.
0607
Section 57. 1939. 138pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Harry Bridges.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; publications; Ukrainian separatist movement; union
organization; deportations; Young Communist League.
0745
Section 58. 1939. 109pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Harry Bridges.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; publications; strikes; International Union of Mine, Mill,
and Smelter Workers; Ukrainian separatist movement; deportations; anti-Communist laws in
Poland and Argentina.
0854
Section 59. 1939. 133pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Benjamin Gitlow.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; publications; mass meetings; American Legion; U.S.
Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; Fascist activities.
0987
Section 60. 1939. 117pp.
People: Harry Bridges; Earl Browder.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; American Civil Liberties Union; Fascist activities; U.S.
Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; publications; antiwar movement; deportations; radio broadcasts; union organization; government employees; mass meetings.
Reel 13
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•General cont.
0001
Section 61. 1939. 68pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; Benjamin Gitlow; Walter G. Krivitsky.
11
Frame
0069
0202
0419
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities;
ILD; American Labor Party; American Civil Liberties Union; strikes; union organization;
CPUS A internal organization; Comintern; Amtorg Trading Corporation; government
employees; Fascist activities; American Legion; publications; motion pictures; anti-Semitism;
antiwar movement.
Section 62. 1939 [also 1935]. 133pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; Vito Marcantonio; J. H. Bollens; Robert Wood.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; radio broadcasts; Fascist activities; antiwar movement;
mass meetings; ILD; Communist activities among black Americans; Civil Rights Federation of
Detroit, Michigan; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; motion pictures;
Comintern.
Section 63. 1939-1940. 217pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Charles E. Coughlin; Earl Browder; William Schneiderman; Jack Johnstone; Morris
Childs; David Drucker; B. Nikolsky.
Subjects: Unemployment; censorship; anti-Communist activities; American Student Union;
Fascist activities; deportations; United Cannery, Agricultural, Packing, and Allied Workers of
America; Internal Revenue Service investigations; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American
Activities; protests against U.S. Department of Justice investigations; publications; registration
of foreign agents; antiwar movement.
Section 64. 1940 [also 1942]. 85pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Martin Luther Thomas; Earl Browder.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; wartime censorship of publications; radio broadcasts;
Ukrainian separatist movement; California state relief agencies; publications; antiwar movement; Young Communist League; passport violations.
Casefile 202600•States
0504
Subsection 1. Alabama. 1919-1920. 7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Alabama; anti-Communist activities; American Legion; Utopian societies; Kiwanis
Club; IWW.
0511
Subsection 3. Arizona. 1919-1924. 8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Arizona; anti-Communist activities; union organization; American Legion; IWW.
0519
Subsection 5. California. 1919-1929. 42pp.
People: Benjamin C. Marsh.
Subjects: California; anti-Communist activities; Friends of the Soviet Union; IWW; union
organization; League of Women Voters; mass meetings; American Legion; Russian immigrants
support for Soviet Russia; Communist Labor Party of America internal organization.
0561
Subsection 6. Colorado. 1919-1920. 6pp.
People: Samuel Gompers; Charles H. Moyer.
Subjects: Colorado; deportations; International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers;
American Federation of Labor; IWW; anti-Communist activities.
0567
Subsection 7. Connecticut. 1919-1929.42pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Connecticut; U.S. Department of Justice raids; radical activities; union organization;
anti-Communist activities; deportations; Socialist Party of America; Communist Labor Party of
America; Communist Party of America; Union of Russian Workers.
0609
Subsection 10. Florida. 1919-1920. 18pp.
People: Roger N. Baldwin.
Subjects: Florida; American Civil Liberties Union; anti-Communist activities; mass meetings;
IWW; American Legion; union organization.
0627
Subsection 11. Georgia. 1920, 1933-1934. 4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Oakland, California; Georgia; mass meetings; union organization; police brutality,
anti-Communist activities.
12
Frame
0631
0648
0652
0708
0717
0752
0763
0766
0772
0785
0825
0856
0867
Subsection 12 [Casefïle 208565]. 1921.17pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Missouri; protest against bankruptcy and cessation of operations by the receiver of the
Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad Company.
Subsection 13. Idaho. 1920.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Idaho; deportations.
Subsection 14. Illinois. 1919-1926. 56pp.
People: Gregory Weinstein; Max Bedacht; Fannie Groosenberg; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens;
Frank Farrington; William D. Haywood.
Subjects: Illinois; anti-Communist activities; deportations; mass meetings; IWW; Amalgamated
Clothing Workers of America; Communist Party of America; Communist Labor Party of
America; American Legion; United Mine Workers of America; union organization; Socialist
Labor Party of America; publications.
Subsection 15. Indiana. 1920-1921. 9pp.
People: Eugene V. Debs.
Subjects: Indiana; Communist Party of America; deportations; May Day; Socialist Party of
America.
Subsection 16. Iowa. 1919-1920. 35pp.
People: J. Louis Engdahl; William D. Haywood.
Subjects: Iowa; Sinn Fein; mass meetings; anti-Communist activities; Socialist Party of
America; American Legion; IWW.
Subsection 17. Kansas. 1919-1920. 11pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Kansas; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 18. Kentucky. 1920. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Kentucky; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 20. Maine. 1919. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Maine; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 21. Maryland. 1919-1920. 13pp.
People: Louis F. Post.
Subjects: Maryland; anti-Communist activities; IWW; deportations.
Subsection 22. Massachusetts. 1919-1921.40pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Massachusetts; anti-Communist activities; May Day; Russian immigrants; mass
meetings; deportations; American Legion.
Subsection 23. Michigan. 1919-1921. 31pp.
People: E. C. Davison.
Subjects: Michigan; anti-Communist activities; May Day; publications; Communist Party of
America; Veterans of Foreign Wars; U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S. Department of
Justice; International Association of Machinists; Communist Labor Party of America; U.S.
Department of Justice raids; deportations; Workers' International Industrial Union; union
organization; IWW.
Subsection 24. Minnesota. 1919-1921.11pp.
People: Louis F. Post.
Subjects: Minnesota; anti-Communist activities; U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S.
Department of Justice; IWW; deportations; U.S. Department of Justice raids.
Subsection 25. Mississippi. 1919. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Mississippi; anti-Communist activities; American Legion.
13
Frame
0870
0896
0900
0915
0920
0950
Subsection 26. Missouri. 1919-1920.26pp.
People: Charles Solomon; Louis Waldman.
Subjects: Missouri; anti-Communist activities; anti-Semitism; IWW; radical activities; Socialist
Party of America; mass meetings; publications; union organization.
Subsection 27. Montana. 1919.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Montana; IWW; union organization.
Subsection 28. Nebraska. 1919-1920. 15pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Nebraska; anti-Communist activities; IWW; state legislation.
Subsection 30. New Hampshire. 1919-1921. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: New Hampshire; Communist Party of America; May Day; anti-Communist activities;
U.S. Department of Justice raids.
Subsection 31. New Jersey. 1919-1921. 30pp. [file folder filmed out of order at Frame 0926]
People: n.a.
Subjects: New Jersey; anti-Communist activities; publications; public libraries; deportations;
IWW; union organization.
Subsection 32. New Mexico. 1920. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: New Mexico; criticism of financial markets; anti-Communist activities; IWW; union
organization; strikes.
Reel 14
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•States cont
0001
Subsection 33. New York. 1919-1920.211pp.
People: Louis F. Post; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Ralph M. Easley; Emma Goldman; Abram A.
Heller.
Subjects: New York; immigration; anti-Communist activities; public reaction to Committee of
Distinguished Members of the American Bar "Report upon the Illegal Practices of the U.S.
Department of Justice"; U.S. Department of Justice raids; May Day; U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S. Department of Justice; deportations; radical activities; Russian immigrants;
Socialist Party of America; Communist Party of America; Russian Soviet Government Bureau
officials; Federation of Unions of Russian Workers; mass meetings.
0212
Subsection 33, Number 4, Special Section Bureau Papers Only. New York. 1921.405pp.
People: Irene Moorman Blackstone; Edward I. Lindgren; Israel Amter; Abraham Jakira;
William Z. Foster; James P. Cannon; James Weldon Johnson; Marcus Garvey; Elizabeth Gurley
Flynn; William D. Haywood; Patrick Quinlan; Clause McKay; Moissaye J. Olgin; James H.
Maurer; John Brophy; J. B. Salutsky; Chandler Owen; Boris Reinstein; Roger N. Baldwin;
Santeri Nuorteva; George C. Vaughn; Adolph Germer; Benjamin Gitlow; Isaac A. Hourwich;
Harry Waton; Walter White; Arturo Giovanitti; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Carlo Tresca; Leo
Krzycki; Kate Richards O'Hare; Robert Minor.
Subjects: New York; radical activities; union organization; IWW; strikes; Communist activities
among black Americans; United Communist Party of America; Comintern; American Agency;
mass meetings; International Ladies Garment Workers Union; Amalgamated Clothing Workers
of America; unemployment; National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; Sinn
Fein; state legislation; Japanese activities; foreign affairs of Soviet Russia; Communist Party of
America; unity convention; Proletarian Party of America; May Day; publications; Rand School
of Social Science; American Civil Liberties Union; Socialist Party of America; American
visitors to Soviet Russia; Brookwood School; Society for the Relief of Soviet Russia; SaccoVanzetti Defense Committee; United Russian Professional Workers; Japanese immigrants;
Communist Labor Party of America.
14
Frame
0617
0629
0638
0646
0664
0694
0821
0830
0837
0862
0877
0900
0904
0917
Subsection 33. Previously Restricted Materials. New York. 1919-1920.12pp.
People: William Z. Foster; J. Edgar Hoover; William D. Haywood; John Reed.
Subjects: New York; strikes; union organization; anti-Communist activities; anti-Semitism;
state legislature investigations; Socialist Party of America; IWW; publications.
Subsection 34. North Carolina. 1919-1921.9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: North Carolina; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 35. North Dakota. 1920-1921.8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: North Dakota; Maryland; union organization; support for Soviet Russia; antiCommunist activities.
Subsection 36. Ohio. 1919-1920.18pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Ohio; IWW; anti-Communist activities; U.S. Department of Justice raids; Socialist
Labor Party of America; deportations; strikes; mass meetings.
Subsection 37. Oklahoma. 1919-1920. 30pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Oklahoma; anti-Communist activities; deportations.
Subsection 39. Pennsylvania 1918-1935.127pp.
People: Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; S an ten Nuorteva; Emma Goldman; Alexander Berkman;
Louis F. Post; Adolphus Hall.
Subjects: Pennsylvania; anti-Communist activities; deportations; American visitors to Soviet
Russia; American Society of Friends; United Communist Party of America; Communist Party
of America; Communist Labor Party of America; Comintern; Socialist Party of America; U.S.
Congress legislation; union organization; publications; IWW; coordination of federal surveillance agencies; private detective agencies; radical activities.
Subsection 42. South Carolina. 1920.9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: South Carolina; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 44. 1919, 1921. 7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Babson Institute; IWW membership statistics in Butte, Montana; publications; union
organization; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 45. Texas. 1920,1934.25pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Texas; HJD; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys; anti-Communist
activities; IWW; U.S. Congress Subcommittee to Investigate Mexican Affairs.
Subsection 46.1934.15pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Hungarian Petition; ILD; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys;
deportations.
Subsection 48. Virginia. 1919-1920. 23pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Virginia; Socialist Party of America state membership statistics; anti-Communist
activities; radical activities; IWW.
Subsection 49. Washington. 1921. 4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Washington; American Legion; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 50. West Virginia. 1919-1920. 13pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: West Virginia; anti-Communist activities; publications; deportations; IWW; union
organization.
Subsection 51. Wisconsin. 1920.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Wisconsin; anti-Communist activities; U.S. Department of Justice raids.
15
Frame
0921
Subsection 52. Wyoming. 1920.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Wyoming; anti-Communist activities in the United States.
CaseFile 202600•Subjects
0923
Subsection 54. 1919.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Censoring radical prisoners' mail; IWW; Leavenworth Penitentiary.
0927
Subsection 55.1919.19pp.
People: Thomas Hawkes; Louis C. Fraina.
Subjects: Moscow, Idaho; state criminal syndicalism laws; deportations; publications; May
Day; union organization.
0948
Subsection 56. 1919-1922. 8pp.
People: Roy Samson.
Subjects: Bureau of Investigation agents; IWW; union organization; deportations; U.S. Department of Justice investigations.
0956
Subsection 57.1919. 3pp.
People: Samuel Kahn; Roy Samson.
Subjects: Bolshevists; U.S. Medical Corps personnel.
0959
Subsection 58.1919-1930.41pp.
People: Hubert C. Herring; Diego Rivera.
Subjects: Communist propaganda in Mexico; International Red Aid; deportations; Pan American Round Table; anti-Communist laws in Mexico; Communist activities in Great Britain;
strikes; publications; Comintern; Manifesto of the Communist Party of Mexico; union
organization; IWW.
Reel IS
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 59, Section 1. 1919-1933. 231pp.
People: Matthew Woll; Ralph M. Easley; Victor L. Berger; Homer S. Cummings.
Subjects: Bills introduced to suppress those who wish to violently overthrow the government;
anti-Communist activities; U.S. Congress antisedition legislation; TUUL; unemployment; antiCommunist laws in Brazil; U.S. deportation laws; U.S. Department of Justice raids; IWW.
0232
Subsection 59, Section 2.1933-1939. 116pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Harry Bridges; Archibald E. Stevenson.
Subjects: Bills introduced to suppress those who wish to violently overthrow the government;
U.S. Congress antisedition legislation; proposals for U.S. Congress legislation against racial
discrimination; American League Against War and Fascism; deportations; Farmer-Labor party;
anti-Communist activities; federal labor unions; American Newspaper Guild; general strikes;
union organization.
0348
Subsection 60. 1919-1921. 11pp.
People: H. C. R. Norriss.
Subjects: n.a.
0359
Subsection 61.1919. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Publications; radical literature in Kansas; agricultural workers.
0365
Subsection 62. 1919. 10pp.
People: Robert D. Carey.
Subjects: Deportations; Wyoming state legislation; strikes; United Mine Workers of America.
0375
Subsection 64. 1919. 5pp.
People: I. H. Leion.
Subjects: Russian immigrants; U.S. Department of Justice investigations.
16
Frame
0380
0407
0413
0590
0597
0603
0761
0765
0768
0774
0777
0786
0788
0793
0797
Subsection 65.1919-1920.27pp.
People: Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Emma Goldman.
Subjects: Deportations; Russian immigrants; censoring deportees' mail; Russian Soviet
Government Bureau officials; U.S. Army Transport Buford.
Subsection 66. 1920. 6pp.
People: Charles H. Wolf.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Justice raids; U.S. Congress legislation.
Subsection 67.1920-1923.177pp.
People: Timothy F. Nolan; John Jackson; Louis F. Post
Subjects: Perjury in deportation case, Helena, Montana; IWW; union organization; habeas
corpus proceedings; U.S. Department of Justice raids.
Subsection 68.1920.7pp.
People: Paul Guabello; Alberto Guabello.
Subject: Deportations.
Subsection 69.1919-1920. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Deportations; anti-Communist activities; U.S. Department of Justice raids.
Subsection 70. 1919-1921. 158pp.
People: Gregory Weinstein; Leon Trotsky; Louis C. Fraina; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Santeri
Nuorteva.
Subjects: Habeas corpus proceedings; Russian immigrants; Socialist Party of America; Communist Party of America; publications; Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; deportations; First Congress of the Comintern; Communist Labor Party of America; IWW.
Subsection 71. 1920.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Tenants League; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 72. 1920. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Cooperation between U.S. Department of State and U.S. Department of Justice;
passport matters.
Subsection 73. 1920. 6pp.
People: Mildred C. Smith; Albert DeSUver.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Justice raids; American Civil Liberties Union.
Subsection 74. 1920. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Union organization; International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Woricers; antiCommunist activities.
Subsection 75. 1920. 9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Protests against U.S. Department of Justice raids in Detroit, Michigan; deportations;
publications.
Subsection 76. 1920. 2pp.
People: Sylvia Pankhurst.
Subjects: Anti-Communist laws in Latvia.
Subsection 77. 1920. 5pp.
People: V. Godowski.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Chautauqua movement
Subsection 78. 1920.4pp.
People: John Smith; Louis F. Post
Subjects: Deportations; Russian immigrants; naturalization proceedings; U.S. Department of
Justice raids.
Subsection 79.1920. 3pp.
People: Angelo Creo.
Subjects: Union organization; IWW.
17
Frame
0800
0806
0817
0822
0825
0854
0858
0861
0871
0875
0882
0886
0889
0903
0906
0908
Subsection 80. 1920. 6pp.
People: Torquato Focine.
Subjects: Anti-Anarchist activities.
Subsection 81. 1920. 11pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Citizens League of Monette, Arkansas; anti-Communist activities; IWW; road
construction projects.
Subsection 82.1920. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Deportations; anti-Communist activities; American Legion.
Subsection 83.1920. 3pp.
People: Steve Devbeak.
Subjects: Russian immigrants; IWW; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 84. 1919-1920. 29pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: The Anti-Bolshevist; anti-Semitism; publications; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 85. 1920,1934. 4pp.
People: Leon Tourian.
Subject: U.S. Department of Justice raid on Communists in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.
Subsection 87. 1920. 3pp.
People: Blasco Ibanez.
Subject: Deportations.
Subsection 89. 1920-1921. 10pp.
People: Martin Abramowitch; Louis F. Post.
Subjects: Communist Party of America; deportations; U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S.
Department of Justice; habeas corpus proceedings.
Subsection 90. 1920.4pp.
People: Otto Vollbrecht
Subject: Anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 95. 1919-1920. 7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Exposing of confidential informant in Philadelphia; assassination attempts; deportations; habeas corpus proceedings; IWW; publications.
Subsection 113. 1934.4pp.
People: Jack Epperson.
Subject: United Mine Workers of America.
Subsection 115. 1928. 3pp.
People: Julius Hecker.
Subject: Arrest of American Methodist missionary in Moscow, USSR.
Subsection 144. 1920-1921.14pp.
People: Harry F. Ward.
Subjects: Radical activities on the Pacific Coast; Military Intelligence Division reports; IWW;
strikes; union organization; state criminal syndicalism laws; Japanese activities; American Civil
Liberties Union; mass meetings.
Subsection 146. 1933. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Request for information on the Socialist Party of America.
Subsection 159. 1921. 2pp.
People: Charles Bramson.
Subjects: American Chemical Society expulsion of member; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 166. 1921. 5pp.
People: Robert Minor; William B. Wilson; Louis F. Post.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; mass meetings; union organization; publications.
18
Frame
0913
0916
0924
0934
0936
Subsection 84.1921,1929. 3pp.
People: John J. Watt; Ben Gold; Clarence A. Hathaway; Earl Browder; Ella Reeve Bloor.
Subjects: Trade Union Unity Conference; union organization; TUUL.
Subsection 198.1920. 8pp.
People: Timothy Nolan; John Jackson.
Subjects: Perjury at habeas corpus proceeding in Helena, Montana; deportations; Non-Partisan
League; Farmer-Labor party.
Subsection 231. 1939-1940. 10pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Novo Russkoe Slovo; publications; anti-Communist activities in Bulgaria; Comintern;
Fascist activities.
Subsection 271. 1927. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Requests for information on the Socialist Party of America.
Subsection 279.1929-1933. 38pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Young Pioneers of America; anti-Communist activities; Farmer-Labor party;
Comintern; publications; Boy Scouts of America; May Day.
Reel 16
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 282. 1920-1921. 23pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist Party of America; publications; unemployment; IWW; organization of
veterans; Comintern.
0024
Subsection 285. 1921. 20pp.
People: Charles Abeel.
Subjects: Threats against the U.S. president; insanity.
0044
Subsection 418, Part 1. 1921-1927. 173pp.
People: Robert M. LaFollette, Jr.; James P. Cannon; David Dubinsky; Victor Olander; Aldino
Felicani.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; protests against Massachusetts state plans for Sacco-Vanzetti
executions; union organization; Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers; HD; SaccoVanzetti Defense Committee; requests for opening of U.S. Department of Justice files regarding Sacco-Vanzetti case; U.S. Congress legislation regarding Sacco-Vanzetti case.
0217
Subsection 418, Part 2. 1927. 236pp.
People: Julia C. Lathrop; James Weldon Johnson; Lincoln Steffens; Victor L. Berger; Powers
Hapgood; Robert M. LaFollette, Jr.; Benjamin C. Marsh.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; requests for opening of U.S. Department of Justice files regarding Sacco-Vanzetti case; protests against Massachusetts state plans for Sacco-Vanzetti executions; Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee; union organization; Socialist Party of America;
Labor party; ELD; mass meetings.
0453
Subsection 418, Part 3.1927. 204pp.
People: Francis Fisher Kane; A. J. Muste; Lincoln Steffens; Arthur Garfield Hays; Jane
Addams; Robert M. LaFollette, Jr.; Rose Baron; Fiorello H. La Guardia.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; requests for opening of U.S. Department of Justice files regarding Sacco-Vanzetti case; protests against Massachusetts state plans for Sacco-Vanzetti executions; union organization; Brookwood Labor College; Sacco-Vanzetti Emergency Committee;
mass meetings; Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee.
19
Frame
0657
Subsection 418, Part 4. 1927. 282pp.
People: Florence Kelley; Joseph Wood Krutch; Julia C. Lathrop; James Weldon Johnson;
Rockwell Kent; Paul U. Kellogg; Louis F. Post; Frank P. Walsh.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; protests against Massachusetts state plans for Sacco-Vanzetti
executions; mass meetings; union organization; requests for opening of U.S. Department of
Justice files regarding Sacco-Vanzetti case.
Reel 17
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 418, Part 5. 1927. 276pp.
People: Julius Rosenwald; Arthur Garfield Hays; Francis Fisher Kane; Cameron King; A. J.
Muste; Howard Kester.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; protests against Massachusetts state plans for Sacco-Vanzetti
executions; requests for opening of U.S. Department of Justice files regarding Sacco-Vanzetti
case; mass meetings; union organization; American Legion; Citizens National Committee for
Sacco and Vanzetti; Socialist Party of America; Brookwood Labor College; Farmer-Labor
party.
0277
Subsection 418, Part 6.1927.163pp.
People: Arthur Garfield Hays; Francis Fisher Kane; Frank P. Walsh; Arthur D. Hill; A. J.
Muste; Joseph Wood Krutch; Rockwell Kent; Louis F. Post; Elisabeth Gilman.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; protests against Sacco-Vanzetti executions; requests for opening
of U.S. Department of Justice files regarding Sacco-Vanzetti case; Citizens National Committee for Sacco and Vanzetti; Brookwood Labor College; Christian Social Justice Fund; deportations; U.S. Department of Justice raids; Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee.
0440
Subsection 418, Part 7. 1927-1947 . 62pp.
People: Gardner Jackson.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; twentieth anniversary of Sacco-Vanzetti executions; ILD;
motion pictures; protests against Sacco-Vanzetti executions; deportations; mass meetings;
Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee.
0502
Subsection 418, Part 8. 1952-1963. 33pp. [file folder missing in the original]
People: n.a.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; requests for information on Sacco-Vanzetti case.
0535
Subsection 478. 1928. 2pp.
People: Antonio Molino.
Subjects: n.a.
0537
Subsection 545. 1920-1921. 29pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical pamphlets; anti-Communist activities; May Day; publications; Communist
Party of America; strikes; union organization; United Communist Party of America; Socialist
Party of America.
0566
Subsection 586. 1937. 5pp.
People: Robert M. La Follette, Jr.; Roger N. Baldwin.
Subjects: U.S. Congress Civil Liberties Committee; National Civil Liberties Bureau; NonPartisan League.
0571
Subsection 634.1921-1940. 34pp.
People: Henry J. Skeffington; Morris Katzeff; William Thomas Colyer; Frank Mack.
Subjects: Deportations; Comintern; Communist Party of America; habeas corpus proceedings.
0607
Subsection 676. 1920-1921.7pp.
People: William Morris Konikov.
Subjects: Alleged Bolshevist agent; anti-Communist laws in Norway.
20
Frame
0614
0616
0626
0628
0674
0675
0680
0749
0755
0758
0769
Subsection 736. 1929.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Chase National Bank; American visitors to Soviet Russia.
Subsection 748. 1934. 10pp.
People: Emma Goldman.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; union organization; publications; antiwar movement.
Subsection 774. 1938. 2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Library of Congress; publications.
Subsection 785. 1923-1933. 46pp.
People: Alton B. Parker.
Subjects: Soviet Russian criminal procedures; American technical advisors in Soviet Russia;
anti-Communist activities; Comintern; U.S. Congress visitors to Soviet Russia; propaganda
efforts.
Subsection 790.1921. Ip. [duplicate frames numbered 0674]
People: n.a.
Subjects: Swiss Socialists; mass meetings in Switzerland; union organization in Switzerland.
Subsection 821. 1922. 5pp. [duplicate frames numbered 0675]
People: Ladovico Caminita; Learned Hand.
Subjects: Deportations; habeas corpus proceedings.
Subsection 823. 1923-1935. 69pp.
People: Walter M. Nelson; Francis Ralston Welsh; Roger N. Baldwin; J. Edgar Hoover;
William J. Donovan; A. J. Muste; Ralph M. Easley; Harry F. Ward; Lewis S. Gannett.
Subjects: American Civil Liberties Union; use of U.S. Department of Justice personnel in
keeping track of Communist activities; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities;
Methodist Episcopal Church investigation of American Civil Liberties Union; Espionage Act
prosecutions; U.S. Department of Labor raids; deportations; anti-Communist activities; mass
meetings; publications; IWW; Brookwood Labor College; Communist Party of America.
Subsection 826. 1921. 6pp.
People: Royal France; Otto Quitzan.
Subjects: Radical activities; mass meetings.
Subsection 839. 1921. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: "Red Europe"; publications.
Subsection 848. 1923. 11pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Criminal Procedures in Czechoslovakia and Estonia; assassinations; jury trials.
Subsection 882, Section 1, Part 1. 1920-1921. 162pp.
People: Bertrand Russell.
Subjects: Revolutionary organizations in the United Kingdom; Soviet Russian relations with
Persia; Communist activities and unemployment in Great Britain; Young Communist International; Sinn Fein; British Labour party; publications in Great Britain; union organization in
Great Britain; Communist Party of Great Britain; Communist Labour Party; Comintern;
Independent Labour party; cooperative movement in Great Britain; National Council of Action;
Indian National Congress; American Civil Liberties Union.
Reel 18
Straight NumericaU File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont.
0001
Subsection 882, Section 1, Part 2. 1919-1920. 166pp. [file folder omitted]
People: n.a.
Subjects: Revolutionary organizations in the United Kingdom; union organization, strikes,
political activities, mass meetings, and publications in Great Britain; Sinn Fein; National
21
Frame
0167
0170
0176
0182
0187
0189
0208
0401
0405
0414
0425
0433
0437
0470
Council of Action; Independent Labour party; British Red Army; Communist Unity Convention; British Socialist party; Bolshevist activities in Eastern Europe and Soviet Russia; U.S.
Postal Service summaries of publications; radical activities in the United States; Communist
Party of America; Workers International Industrial Union.
Subsection 989. 1921. 3pp.
People: Sidney L. Gulick.
Subject: Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America.
Subsection 999. 1921.6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: IWW in Chile; merchant seamen; union organization; general strikes; lockouts.
Subsection 1025.1926. 6pp.
People: Maier Janeo.
Subject: Radical activities in Argentina.
Subsection 1037.1932. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in the U.S. Post Office Department; Chicago, Illinois.
Subsection 1043.1921. 2pp.
People: Tomas Rakocevich.
Subject: Serbian immigrants.
Subsection 1053.1921. 19pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Manifesto of the Communistic Party of the French Section of the Third International;
Communist activities in France; Comintern; union organization.
Subsection 1072, Part 1. 1920-1921. 193pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical and Communist activities in Norway; political activities, publications, and
union organization in Norway; Norwegian Labor party; Comintern; lists of persons engaging in
Bolshevist activities in Norway and lists of persons receiving Bolshevist materials internationally; diplomatic relations between Soviet Russia and Great Britain.
Subsection 1072, Part 2. 1928.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical and Communist Activities in Norway; strikes; Norwegian Communist party;
union organization.
Subsection 1075.1921.9pp.
People: Benjamin C. Marsh.
Subjects: People's Reconstruction League; U.S. Department of Justice investigations.
Subsection 1081.1921.11pp.
People: Peter Kropotkin.
Subjects: Free Society; publications; union organization; international anarchist movement.
Subsection 1107.1933-1935. 8pp.
People: Constance Williams; Ralph Spooner.
Subjects: Workers Educational Association; Workers' Educational Training Center at Yale
University; CPUSA; National Recovery Administration.
Subsection 1161.1935.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: S.S. Shinyomaru; dismissal of lawsuit by U.S. Department of Labor.
Subsection 1212.1927-1930. 33pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: League Opposed to Imperialism; Communist activities in Cuba; union organization in
Cuba; Comintern; anti-Communist laws in Cuba; criminal justice procedures in Brazil.
Subsection 1230.1932. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Federated Press; anti-Communist activities in the United States.
22
Frame
0473
0681
0683
0688
0691
0700
0758
0761
0770
0774
0788
0800
0802
Subsection 1235. Special Section Bureau Papers Only. 1920-1921.208pp.
People: Joe Davidson; Lincoln Steffens; A. A. Joffe; George Hardy; Eduard Bernstein.
Subjects: Communist activities in Germany; Soviet Russian relations with Finland; surveillance
of radical newspaper correspondents in Berlin, Finland, and Soviet Russia; American proGerman propagandists employed by German heavy industry interests; Bolshevist propaganda in
Germany; Soviet Russian relations with Germany; Comintern; Communist party convention in
Berlin; IWW; organization of Communist propaganda in Germany; Third Congress of the
Comintern; Congress of European Bolshevist Leaders in Bremen; laws affecting the life and
liberty of individuals in Soviet Russia; anti-Communist laws in Hungary; Second International;
antiwar movement; strikes in Germany.
Subsection 1235.1936. 2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Germany; pro-German propaganda.
Subsection 1290. 1921-1922. 5pp.
People: Heinrich Bartel.
Subject: Seizure of shipment of Communist books.
Subsection 1328.1921.3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Lisbon car strike; paralysis of public tram system in Portugal.
Subsection 1338. 1921. 9pp.
People: Boris Reinstein; V. I. Lenin; Leon Trotsky.
Subjects: "Appeal to the American Workers"; American Bureau, International Council of
Trades and Industrial Unions; Comintern; IWW.
Subsection 1351. 1921-1931. 58pp.
People: Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: Friends of the Soviet Union; U.S. Department of Justice seizure of propaganda; antiCommunist activities; American Committee for Russian Famine Relief; American medical
assistance to Soviet Russia; publications.
Subsection 1351. Previously Restricted Materials. 1931. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Friends of the Soviet Union; U.S. Department of Justice seizure of propaganda;
cooperation with U.S. Post Office Department.
Subsection 1359. 1928-1929. 9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities, union organization, Soviet propaganda, and labor legislation in
Brazil.
Subsection 1368. 1921. 4pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Valparaiso University, Indiana.
Subsection 1421. 1929. 14pp.
People: Nikolai Bukharin; Joseph Stalin; Gregory Zinoviev.
Subjects: Comintern factionalism and internal politics; Soviet Russian publications; antiCommunist activities in Latvia.
Subsection 1472. 1921. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Phoenix, Arizona, Trades Council; union organization; mass meetings; distribution of
seditious literature; IWW.
Subsection 1480. 1921. 2pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: IWW in Oklahoma.
Subsection 1497.1921.2pp.
People: Maxim Litvinov; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subject: Soviet Russian envoy to the United States.
23
Frame
0804
0832
0874
0882
0885
0894
0901
0911
0958
0964
0973
Subsection 1536.1929. 28pp.
People: Michael Karolyi; Miklós von Nagybánya Horthy.
Subjects: World Anti-Fascist Society; publications; Comintern; Hungarian immigrants; antiCommunist activities; U.S. laws regarding passports and the admission of aliens.
Subsection 1616.1927-1929.42pp.
People: Francis Dwyer; Scott Nearing.
Subjects: Communism in Paraguay, Germany, Belgium, and Finland; U.S. Department of State
cooperation with U.S. Department of Justice; American visitors to Soviet Russia.
Subsection 1617.1921. 8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: May Day propaganda; Communist Party of America; publications; anti-Communist
activities.
Subsection 1626.1927. 3pp.
People: Emir Chakib Arslan.
Subjects: Syrian and Lebanese immigrants; religious fanaticism.
Subsection 1643.1921. 9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: International Socialist Conference in Vienna; lists of European delegates to Conference of the Second International.
Subsection 1678.1931. 7pp.
People: John Maynard Keynes.
Subjects: "The People's Business"; People's Legislative Service publications; National
Conference of Progressives.
Subsection 1748.1921. 10pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects:^United Communist Party of America in Grand Rapids, Michigan; publications; May
Day; unemployment
Subsection 1885.1921.47pp.
People: Edward I. Lindgren; Abraham Jakira.
Subjects: Indictment against Secretary of the Communist Labor Party of America; U.S.
Department of Justice raids; publications.
Subsection 1787.1921. 6pp.
People: George Hardy.
Subjects: IWW and Communist Party of America in Minneapolis, Minnesota; mass meetings.
Subsection 1792.1922. 9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Jewish Federation of the American Labor Alliance; mass meetings.
Subsection 1795.1921.4pp.
People .n.a.
Subjects: Freie Press of Cincinnati, Ohio; pro-German publications.
0977
0982
Subsection 1856.1921. 5pp.
People: Jacob Eberhardt.
Subjects: DerStaats Anzeiger of Bismarck, North Dakota; pro-Soviet Russia publications.
Subsection 1897.1922.2pp.
People: Andre J. Spizak.
Subjects: Deportations; habeas corpus proceedings.
Reel 19
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 1932. 1921-1922. 37pp.
People: John Grunzweig; William J. Donovan.
Subjects: Deportations; habeas corpus proceedings.
24
Frame
0038
0049
0051
0057
0066
0090
0149
0151
0169
0171
0192
0211
0214
0422
Subsection 1935. 1921. 11pp.
People: J. E. Chambers; J. J. Surmacz.
Subjects: Seditious and revolutionary literature; Bureau of Investigation search and seizure;
private detectives; public libraries; radical publications in Mexico.
Subsection 1945.1921. 2pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Radical literature.
Subsection 2061.1921. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Russian Orthodox Church in America; financial difficulties; internal organization.
Subsection 2105. 1933-1936. 9pp.
People: David Lasser; Herbert Benjamin
Subjects: State criminal syndicalism laws in Alaska and California; Workers Alliance of
America; ILD; protests against state criminal syndicalism laws.
Subsection 2149. 1923-1926. 24pp.
People: Joe Dzenat.
Subjects: Deportations; naturalizations.
Subsection 2229. 1928-1930. 59pp.
People: Earl Browder; William Z. Foster.
Subjects: Passport violations; Woricers Educational Bureau; Workers (Communist) Party of
America; Communist activities in China; publications.
Subsection 2230. 1923. 2pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Marine Transport Workers Union.
Subsection 2237.1924. 18pp.
People: John Herman, Jr.
Subject: Anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2250. 1921. 2pp.
People: Edmond O'Sullivan.
Subject: Irish revolutionaries.
Subsection 2253. 1921-1922. 21pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical publications; Workers (Communist) Party of America; Communist Party of
America; unemployment; Tulsa, Oklahoma, race riots; Communist activities among black
Americans; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2265.1921-1935. 19pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist Party of Puerto Rico election campaigns; CPUS A mass meetings in Rock
Island, Illinois; Workers (Communist) Party of America; deportations; U.S. Department of
Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor; Comintern.
Subsection 2275. 1921.3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical publications; Communist Party of America; Tulsa, Oklahoma, race riots.
Subsection 2297, Section 1. 1927-1931. 208pp.
People: William Z. Foster.
Subjects: Soviet propaganda, subversion, and conditions in Russia; American visitors and
technical advisors in Soviet Russia; publications; propaganda in Great Britain; Comintern; antiCommunist activities; international arms shipments; Russian Society to Aid National Russia;
Profintem; Communist activities among black Americans; Sacco-Vanzetti case; union organization; unemployment; TUUL; Communist Party of America; Communist activities in Latin
America; Soviet Russian diplomatic personnel.
Subsection 2297, Section 2. 1931-1932. 378pp.
People: Ada Wright; S. J. Rutgers; Michael Borodin; Anna Louise Strong.
Subjects: Soviet propaganda, subversion, and conditions in Russia; anti-Communist activities
in Germany; USSR relations with the Netherlands; union organization in the USSR; Profintem;
25
Frame
0800
Friends of the Soviet Union; protests against prosecution of the Scottsboro Boys; Communist
activities in Sweden; Young Communist League of the United States; Communist activities
among black Americans; American visitors and technical advisors to the USSR; English
language publications in the USSR; International Red Aid; international unemployment and
union organization among sailors and merchant seamen; foreign trade, economic conditions,
and laws of the USSR.
Subsection 2297, Section 3, Part 1. 1938-1939. 110pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Soviet propaganda, subversion, and conditions in Russia; economic conditions and
laws of the USSR; Ukrainian separatist movement; Fascist activities in Germany, Italy, and
Japan; anti-Communist activities in the United States; Comintern; elections in the USSR.
Reel 20
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 2297, Section 3, Part 2. 1932-1938.222pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Bela Kun.
Subjects: Soviet propaganda, subversion, and conditions in Russia; Ukrainian separatist
movement; anti-Communist activities; economic conditions and laws of the USSR; International Entente Against the Third International; Comintern; Second International; Spanish Civil
war; publications; American visitors and technical advisors to the USSR; Communist activities
in Canada, Poland, and Germany; Communist International of Youth; Comintern financial
matters; TUUL strikes and union organization; international strikes and union organization;
Profintem.
0223
Subsection 2298. 1928. 17pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist laws and Communist activities in Finland.
0240
Subsection 2378.1934. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Comintern.
0243
Subsection 2391.1921.4pp.
People: Jacques Roberto Cibrario.
Subjects: Defrauding of Soviet Russian government by Soviet agents in the United States;
motion pictures.
0247
Subsection 2401.1949. 3pp.
People: Leon Trotsky.
Subject: Request for information on stay of Trotsky in United States during 1918.
0250
Subsection 2409.1922. 3pp.
People: Isaac Halperin.
Subjects: Deportations; merchant seamen.
0253
Subsection 2453. 1923. 2pp.
People: Michael Lojan.
Subjects: Deportations; habeus corpus proceedings.
0255
Subsection 2562. 1928. 3pp.
People: Calogero Speziale.
Subjects: Italian immigrants; publications.
0258
Subsection 2586.1927. 5pp.
People: Rosika Schwimmer.
Subjects: Citizenship matters; antiwar movement.
0263
Subsection 2602.1929. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Workers (Communist) Party of America pamphlet; anti-Communist activities.
26
Frame
0266
0274
0278
0281
0285
0288
0300
0303
0306
0312
0323
0335
0375
0379
0384
Subsection 2631. 1921.8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Ukrainian separatist movement; protests against Polish occupation forces.
Subsection 2697.1921.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Foreign Labor Relief Committee; European assistance for famine relief in Soviet
Russia.
Subsection 2698. 1921. 3pp.
People: Abraham Solomon.
Subject: Anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2699.1921.4pp.
People: Abram A. Heller.
Subjects: Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; U.S. representative of the Supreme
Council of National Economy of the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic.
Subsection 2700. 1921. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2701. 1921-1922. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Protests against intervention in Soviet Russia; publications; Comintern; Russian
famine relief.
Subsection 2702. 1922. 3pp.
People: Oskari Tokoi.
Subject: Deportations.
Subsection 2703. 1922. 3pp.
People: Stephen Csaktomyai.
Subject: Anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2704. 1922. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Protests against un-American activities.
Subsection 2706. 1922-1931. 11pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Better America Federation; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2707.1922-1929. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist schools in Massachusetts; Young Men's Christian Association educational programs; Young Communist League educational programs; Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
Subsection 2708. 1922.40pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist propaganda; labor and economic conditions in Soviet Russia; American
Relief Administration programs in Soviet Russia; Comintern; foreign policy and diplomatic
personnel of the Russian Socialist Federated Soviet Republic.
Subsection 2709. 1922.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Lumber Workers' Industrial Union of Canada; union organization; cooperation with
Communist party; IWW.
Subsection 2710. 1922. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Union organization in Australia; revolutionary activities; Profintem.
Subsection 2711. 1922. 4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: U.S. restrictions on Communist publications; German government request for
information on anti-Communist activities.
27
Frame
0388
0395
0399
0402
0416
0418
0422
0431
0434
0449
0455
0460
0463
0558
0561
Subsection 2712. 1922. 7pp.
People: William Z. Foster.
Subjects: Trade Union Educational League; Profintem; industrial unionism.
Subsection 2713. 1922.4pp.
People: Dana Cook.
Subjects: Seditious utterances during World War I; publications; union organization.
Subsection 2714. 1922. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist schools in Yucatan, Mexico.
Subsection 2716.1924. 14pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: State antisedition laws; U.S. Department of Justice assistance in state prosecutions;
Workers (Communist) Party of America; Comintern; U.S. Department of Justice investigations
in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Subsection 2717. 1922. 2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: U.S. Virgin Islands Socialist Party; Socialist Party of America.
Subsection 2718. 1922-1927.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Young Workers League; antiwar movement.
Subsection 2719. 1922. 9pp.
People: M. Alexander Schwartz.
Subjects: American visitors to Soviet Russia; Second Congress of the Third International;
Comintern; propaganda efforts; U.S. Congress investigations of Communist activities;
publications.
Subsection 2720.1922. 3pp.
People: William Z. Foster; Roger N. Baldwin.
Subjects: American Fund for Public Service; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2721. 1922. 15pp.
People: Harry F. Ward; Roger N. Baldwin; Norman Thomas.
Subjects: American Civil Liberties Union; protests against U.S. Department of Justice raid of
Communist Party of America convention held at Bridgman, Michigan; U.S. Department of
Justice assistance to state criminal syndicalism prosecutions.
Subsection 2722.1922. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Organization of Profintem propaganda; Red International of Trade Unions.
Subsection 2723.1922. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anarchist conspiracy against the United Sutes; anarchist activities in Italy.
Subsection 2724.1922. 3pp.
People: Spasoje Markovich.
Subjects: Naturalizations; anticonscription matters; IWW.
Subsection 2725. 1922-1935. 95pp.
People: Clarence H. Gerlipp.
Subjects: Deportations; U.S. Congress legislation; insane asylum inmates; threats against the
U.S. president.
Subsection 2726. 1922-1924. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Italian radicals in the United States.
Subsection 2728. 1922-1927. 21pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Workers (Communist) Party of America; international delegates to Chicago, Illinois,
convention; propaganda efforts; anti-Communist activities; Workers Educational League.
28
Frame
0582
0589
0599
0609
0613
0826
0828
0833
0840
0854
0857
0859
0869
0879
Subsection 2729.1922-1923.7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: "A Martyr of the People"; motion picture imports into the United States.
Subsection 2730.1923. 10pp.
People: Taddeo Cuomo.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Justice raid of Communist Party of America convention held at
Bridgman, Michigan; U.S. Department of Justice assistance to state criminal syndicalism
prosecutions.
Subsection 2731.1923-1924. 10pp.
People: Isaac Kazanin.
Subjects: Naturalizations; Bolshevist agents.
Subsection 2732. 1923.4pp.
People: Mijo Jelovich.
Subject: South Slavic Socialist Federation.
Subsection 2374.1922-1946. 213pp.
People: William Z. Foster; Jay Lovestone; Benjamin Gitlow; Mary G. Kilbreth; Everett P.
Wheeler; James P. Cannon; Robert Minor; William W. Weinstone; Ella Reeve Bloor; Max
Bedacht; Rose Pastor Stokes; Rebecca Sackarow; Edgar Owens; Gustave Schulenberg; John J.
Ballam; Earl Browder.
Subjects: Logan Act and Communists; registration of agents of foreign governments; Argentina; Dominican Republic; Mexico; Soviet Russia; Workers (Communist) Party of America;
Fascist activities; anti-Communist activities; U.S. Congress investigation of Communist
activities; Comintern; anti-Communist publications; Labor Defense Council; U.S. Department
of Justice raid of Communist Party of America convention held at Bridgman, Michigan; radical
activities in railroad strikes; Trade Union Educational League.
Subsection 2735. 1923. 2pp.
People: Joseph Londrigan.
Subject: Workers (Communist) Party of America.
Subsection 2736. 1923. 5pp.
People: Adam Hampel.
Subjects: Bolshevist agent en route to the United States from Austria; cancellation of visas.
Subsection 2737.1923. 7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communists in France; anti-Communist laws in France.
Subsection 2738. 1923. 14pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Russian and German immigrants in Kansas; deportations; naturalizations.
Subsection 2739.1923. 3pp.
People: Samuel Gompers.
Subjects: United Mine Workers of America; American Federation of Labor; union organization.
Subsection 2740. 1923. 2pp.
People: Hanes Kaltenbom.
Subjects: Radio broadcasts; publications.
Subsection 2741. 1924-1928. 10pp.
People: Charles E. Ruthenberg; Francis A. Morrow; Isaac E. Ferguson; Harry M. Winitsky;
Benjamin Gitlow; James Larkin.
Subjects: Propaganda efforts; state criminal syndicalism prosecutions.
Subsection 2743.1924-1928. 10pp.
People: Bela Kun.
Subjects: Anti-Communist laws in Austria; Communist activities in Hungary and the United
States.
Subsection 2745. 1924. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical activities in Ohio.
29
Frame
0882
0894
0936
0938
0942
0946
0948
0957
0968
Subsection 2746. 1924. 12pp.
People: Alexander?. Schneider.
Subjects: Dakota Freie Presse, New Ulm, Minnesota; anti-Communist activities; Bolshevist
agents in the United States.
Subsection 2747.1924-1925.42pp.
People: Jouda L. Cooper; Roger N. Baldwin.
Subjects: American Civil Liberties Union; Workers (Communist) Party of America; free speech
issues; mass meetings; IWW.
Subsection 2748.1924.2pp.
People: Judson King.
Subjects: National Popular Government League; protests against anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2750.1925.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Serbian Congressional Club; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2752.1925.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: National Croatian Society; mass meetings; Communist Party of America.
Subsection 2753.1925.2pp.
People: De-Linde.
Subject: Russian agents in the United States.
Subsection 2754.1925.9pp.
People: William Z. Foster; Charles E. Ruthenberg; N. Dozenburg; Jay Lovestone; Earl
Browder.
Subjects: Workers (Communist) Party of America; publications; propaganda efforts; May Day;
mass meetings; anti-Communist activities; union organization; International Association of
Machinists.
Subsection 2755. 1925-1930. 11pp.
People: Francis Ralston Welsh; Matthew Woll.
Subjects: TUUL and National Unemployment League; anti-Communist activities in the United
States; American Civil Liberties Union; Trade Union Educational League.
Subsection 2756. 1925. 15pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Ku Klux Klan; publications; Fascist activities; Communist activities; Southern
nationalism.
Reel 21
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 2757.1925. 17pp.
People: Bertram D. Wolfe; Francis Ralston Welsh; William J. Donovan; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Deportations of Communists from Mexico; Comintern; Workers (Communist) Party
of America election campaigns; anti-Communist activities; Communist and anti-Communist
activities in Mexico; general strikes.
0018
Subsection 2758.1925. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Panama; union organization; mass meetings.
0024
Subsection 2759.1925. 3pp.
People: Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: Inter-Parliamentary Union Conference; anti-Communist activities.
0027
Subsection 2760. Section 1.1925-1933.70pp.
People: n.a.
30
Frame
0097
0111
0117
0120
0142
0162
0172
0175
0264
0284
0333
Subjects: The Daily Worker; protests against radical publications; Woricers (Communist) Party
of America; union organization; Communist activities among black Americans; ILD; antiCommunist activities; International Entente Against the Third International.
Subsection 2760. Previously Restricted Materials. 1927-1928. 14pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: The Daily Worker; Workers (Communist) Party of America; publications; use of
injunctions in labor disputes; union organization; anti-Communist activities; Workers (Communist) Party of America election campaigns.
Subsection 2761. 1926-1927. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: The Fellowship of Youth for Peace; Youth Section of the Fellowship of Reconciliation; anti-war movement
Subsection 2761. Previously Restricted Materials. 1926. 3pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: The Fellowship of Youth for Peace; Student Volunteer Convention; anti-war
movement.
Subsection 2762. Previously Restricted Materials. 1926.22pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Young Pioneers of America; publications; Fellowship of Youth for Peace; anti-war
movement; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2763. 1926-1940. 20pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Croatian Fraternal Union of America; factionalism and internal politics among
Croatian immigrants.
Subsection 2764. 1926-1927. 10pp.
People: Harry Nudelman; Jacob Nudelman.
Subjects: Naturalizations; Workers (Communist) Party of America; U.S. Congress investigations of radical activities; Young Pioneers of America.
Subsection 2764. Previously Restricted Materials. 1927. 3pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Harry Nudelman.
Subjects: Naturalizations; Workers (Communist) Party of America.
Subsection 2765.1923-1938. 89pp.
People: Charles F. Drake; Längsten Hughes; Frank Pease; Ralph M. Easley; William J.
Donovan; Will H. Hays.
Subjects: Soviet Russian motion pictures; Spanish Civil War; motion picture production in the
United States and in Soviet Russia; Friends of the Soviet Union; American visitors to Soviet
Russia; Communist activities among black Americans; U.S. Treasury Department censorship of
imported films; anti-Communist activities; Amkino Trading Corporation; Friends of Soviet
Russia; Workers (Communist) Party of America.
Subsection 2765. Previously Restricted Materials. 1932. 20pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Frank Pease; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Soviet Russian motion pictures; motion picture production in the United States and in
Soviet Russia; American visitors to Soviet Russia; Sacco-Vanzetti case; anti-Communist
activities.
Subsection 2766. 1926-1929.49pp.
People: Mossaiye J. Olgin.
Subjects: Communist activities in the United States; publications; union organization; United
Farmers' Educational League; ILD; strikes; Communist activities among black Americans;
Fascist activities in Italy; antiwar movement; Workers (Communist) Party of America; Young
Communist League.
Subsection 2767. 1926. 6pp.
People: Francis Ralston Welsh.
Subjects: Massachusetts Committee on Military Training in Schools and Colleges; American
Civil Liberties Union; antiwar movement; anti-Communist activities.
31
Frame
0339
0348
0355
0386
0392
0399
0401
0408
0411
0420
0424
0428
0433
0438
0441
Subsection 2768.1927-1929.9pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Woikmen's Circle; educational programs; colonization of Jews in Soviet Russia.
Subsection 2769.1927. 7pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Radical publications.
Subsection 2771.1927. 31pp.
People: Francis Ralston Welsh; Harry F. Ward; Benjamin Gitlow; David Wallerstein; Robert
Morss LovetL
Subjects: American Legion; anti-Communist activities; Liberal Club of the West Chester,
Pennsylvania, State Normal School; American Civil Liberties Union; U.S. Congress investigations of radical activities; antiwar movement; free speech issues.
Subsection 2772.1927. 6pp.
People: Longin F. Gems.
Subjects: Trade Commission of the USSR in Canada; USSR diplomatic relations with Great
Britain; Chinese nationalist movement
Subsection 2774.1927.7pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Communist activities in the Netherlands East Indies.
Subsection 2775.1927.2pp.
People: Boris Skvirsky.
Subjects: Russian Information Bureau in the United States; propaganda efforts.
Subsection 2777.1927. 7pp.
People: Robert Sinclair.
Subject: British anarchist in the United States and Canada.
Subsection 2778.1927. 3pp.
People: Viachislav Pokrovsky; Maria Pokrovsky.
Subjects: Soviet agents in the United States; Amtorg Trading Corporation.
Subsection 2778. Previously Restricted Materials. 1929.9pp. [file folder omitted]
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Alaska; publications.
Subsection 2779. 1927.4pp.
People: Roberto Hinojoso.
Subject: Soviet agents in the United States, Bolivia, and Chile.
Subsection 2780.1927.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: London Association for Protection of Trade; foreign trade between Great Britain and
the USSR.
Subsection 2781. 1928. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Sacramento, California, Bee; seditious articles; U.S. foreign policy in Nicaragua.
Subsection 2782. 1928. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Unknown subjects' contempt of court; striking miners in Ohio; Bureau of Investigation investigation of local meeting of miners union.
Subsection 2783.1928. 3pp.
People: Adam Ghetto.
Subject: Deportations.
Subsection 2784.1928.4pp.
People: Tedor Tzekoff.
Subject: Soviet agents in the United States.
32
Frame
0445
0449
0451
0453
0461
0480
0485
0506
0519
0522
0530
0538
0541
0546
0552
Subsection 2785.1928-1934.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Mexico; motion pictures in the United States; radical
activities in the United States.
Subsection 2786.1928. 2pp.
People: Serge de Zanco; Eugenie de Primo-Zanco.
Subject: Alien matters.
Subsection 2787.1928.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: n.a.
Subsection 2788.1928-1938. 8pp.
People: Walter Schevenals.
Subjects: Communist activities in Alaska; Spanish Civil War; Trade Union Relief for Spain;
International Federation of Trade Unions; Alaska Native Brotherhood of Alaska; union
organization; Fishermen and Cannery Workers Union; TUUL.
Subsection 2789.1928-1929.19pp.
People: Paul Crouch; George Orr Pershing; Fred Creque.
Subjects: Espionage Act matter; Workers (Communist) Party of America; Young Communist
League; cooperative movement
Subsection 2790.1928. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Latin American Nationalist League; radical activities in France.
Subsection 2790. Previously Restricted Materials. 1928-1929. 21pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Eduardo Machado.
Subjects: Latin American Nationalist League; Civic Club of New York City; radical activities
in New York; All American Anti-Imperialist League; radical activities in Guatemala.
Subsection 2791.1929. 13pp.
People: Sun Yat-sen.
Subjects: International Relations Committee; Kuomintang; political affairs in China; antiwar
movement.
Subsection 2791. Previously Restricted Materials. 1928. 3pp. [file folder omitted]
People: n.a.
Subjects: International Relations Committee; radical organizations; antiwar movement; union
organization.
Subsection 2792.1928. 8pp.
People: Jace Popowetzsky.
Subjects: Communist activities in the United States; postal service between the United States
and the USSR.
Subsection 2792. Previously Restricted Materials. 1930. 8pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Jace Popowetzsky; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Communist activities in the United States.
Subsection 2793.1928. 3pp.
People: John Porter.
Subjects: Mass meetings; antiwar movement.
Subsection 2794.1929. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Indiana coalfields; union organization; Workers (Communist) Party of America; United Mine Workers of America; U.S. Conciliation Service.
Subsection 2795.1929. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Young Pioneers of America; publications; Boy Scouts of America.
Subsection 2796.1929-1930.42pp.
People: Nestor Gavaux.
Subjects: Radical activities planned against railroads in the United States and Alaska; private
detectives; IWW.
33
Frame
0594
0673
0679
0688
0691
0697
0703
0726
0738
0746
0751
0755
0775
0788
Subsection 2797. 1929-1933. 79pp.
People: Maxwell M. Rozan; Alexander Buckman; Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: Communist activities; deportations of Americans from Canada and Japan; American
technical experts in the USSR; International Red Aid; Profintem; anti-Communist laws in
Canada, Japan, and Finland; anti-Communist activities in the United States; Amtorg Trading
Corporation.
Subsection 2797. Previously Restricted Materials. 1929. 6pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: Communist activities; alleged Soviet arsenal in Maryland; anti-Communist activities
in the United States.
Subsection 2798. 1929. 9pp.
People: Morris Gottfried; Anita Whitney.
Subjects: American Legion; anti-Communist activities; children's summer camps; Young
Pioneers of America; Workers International Relief; Boy Scouts of America.
Subsection 2799.1931. 3pp.
People: Constantini Lippa.
Subjects: Naturalizations; union organization of shoe workers; use of injunctions in labor
disputes; U.S. Conciliation Service.
Subsection 2799. Previously Restricted Materials. 1929. 6pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Constantini Lippa; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Naturalizations; union organization of shoe workers; U.S. Conciliation Service.
Subsection 2800.1930.6pp.
People: Camillio Luigi Mario Bemeri.
Subjects: Italian anarchists in Belgium, the United States, and Italy.
Subsection 2801. Previously Restricted Materials. 1929-1930.23pp.
People: Ricardo Lone; J. Edgar Hoover; Rudolph Leone.
Subjects: Italian and Spanish anarchists in Ohio and Belgium; Bureau of Investigation; U.S.
Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of State.
Subsection 2802. 1930. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Italian Sporting Club of Erie, Pennsylvania; mutual aid associations.
Subsection 2803.1930. 8pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist propaganda in Hawaii; Japanese language publications; anti-Communist
activities.
Subsection 2804.1930. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: American technical advisors in the USSR; Russian tractor company recruitment in
Detroit, Michigan.
Subsection 2805. Previously Restricted Materials. 1930.4pp.
People: Ivan Volosewitch.
Subjects: Communist propagandists in the United States.
Subsection 2806.1930-1932. 20pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Amtorg Trading Corporporation; Communist activities among black Americans;
American technical advisors in the USSR; U.S. Congress investigations of Communist activities in the United States.
Subsection 2806. Previously Restricted Materials. 1930-1932. 13pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Amtorg Trading Corporation; Soviet espionage in the United States; Bureau of
Intelligence cooperation with U.S. Naval Intelligence Division.
Subsection 2807. 1930. 5pp.
People: Joseph Gerrard.
Subject: Communist immigrants from Great Britain.
34
Frame
0793
0801
0820
0823
0836
0848
0852
0910
0930
0934
Subsection 2808.1930-1932. 8pp.
People: H. A. Jung.
Subjects: American Vigilant Intelligence Federation; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2808. Previously Restricted Materials. 1930. 19pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover; H. A. Jung.
Subjects: American Vigilant Intelligence Federation; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2809.1930. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Communist propaganda regarding bank safety.
Subsection 2810.1930-1931. 13pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: II Martello; Italian language anti-Fascist publications in the United States.
Subsection 2811.1931. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist propaganda in El Salvador; radical activities in the United States and
Latin America; International Red Aid; Profintem.
Subsection 2812.1931. 4pp.
People: Matilda Chapin Spence.
Subject: Protests against anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2813.1931. 58pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Southern Worker; CPUSA; union organization; TUUL; publications; U.S. Congress
investigations of Communist activities; Communist activities among black Americans; agricultural workers; unemployment; mass meetings; strikes.
Subsection 2814. Previously Restricted Materials. 1931.20pp.
People: John Matvin; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Alleged Soviet espionage by U.S. chemical manufacturers.
Subsection 2815.1931-1932.4pp.
People: Paul Kassay.
Subject: Immigration of Hungarian Communist to the United States.
Subsection 2815. Previously Restricted Materials. 1931-1933. 14pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Paul Kassay; J. Edgar Hoover; Major Barnes.
Subjects: Sabotage; criminal syndicalism; Soviet agents in the United States; American
technical advisors in the USSR.
Reel 22
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 2817. 1931-1934. 14pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: United Farmers League of America; unemployment; protests against arrests of
militant farmers in South Dakota; American Legion; farmers holiday movement
0015
Subsection 2817. Previously Restricted Materials. 1932-1933. 13pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Lemuel Harris; Ella Reeve Bloor.
Subjects: United Farmers League of America; Farm Research, Inc.; Farmers National Committee for Action; farmers holiday movement; publications; mass meetings in New York City; list
of radical organizations and individuals in the United States compiled by American Vigilant
Intelligence Federation; CPUSA; Farmers March on Washington, D.C.
0028
Subsection 2818. Previously Restricted Materials. 1931.16pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist sabotage in the United States; alleged plans to blow up U.S. Army
arsenals in New York and New Jersey; German Military Information Bureau in New York.
35
Frame
0044
0168
0285
0289
0328
0333
0346
0369
0377
0387
0392
0399
0406
0410
0421
Subsection 2819, Section 1. Previously Restricted Materials. 1934-1937.124pp. [file folder
omitted]
People: George W. Christians; William Dudley Pelley; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Crusader White Shirts; Crusaders for Economic Liberty; anti-Communist activities;
Ku Klux Klan; publications; Fascist activities; American League Against War and Fascism.
Subsection 2819, Section 2. Previously Restricted Materials. 1937-1941. 117pp.
People: George W. Christians; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Crusader White Shirts; Crusaders for Economic Liberty; anti-Communist activities;
Ku Klux Klan; Fascist activities.
Subsection 2820.1931.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Soviet espionage and inquiries regarding plans of U.S. torpedo manufacturer.
Subsection 2821. 1931-1938. 39pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Fascist activities and anti-Semitic laws in Germany; protests against pro-German and
Fascist activities in the United States.
Subsection 2822. 1933. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Workers' Ex-Servicemen's League; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 2822. Previously Restricted Materials. 1931-1935.13pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Workers' Ex-Servicemen's League; Communist activities among U.S. veterans;
CPUSA; Comintern; American Legion; mass meetings; Bonus Army.
Subsection 2823.1932-1933. 23pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical publications regarding banks; union organization; banking conditions in the
United States.
Subsection 2823. Previously Restricted Materials. 1932. 8pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Radical publications regarding banks; banking conditions in the United States.
Subsection 2824. 1932. 10pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Ford Motor Company strikes; anti-Communist activities; unemployment; mass
meetings; union organization; violence in labor disputes.
Subsection 2825.1932. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist propaganda; protests against Japanese activities in China; CPUSA;
Young Communist League; ILD.
Subsection 2826. Previously Restricted Materials. 1932.7pp.
People: Lvowich Zemliakoff; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Russian immigrants in the United States and the Canary Islands.
Subsection 2827. 1932. 7pp.
People: George F. Hanselman.
Subjects: Summer employees of the National Park Service; Communist propaganda.
Subsection 2828.1932.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Communist activities in West Virginia.
Subsection 2829. 1932. 11pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; veterans organizations; Ladies Auxiliary of the Grand
Army of the Republic; Washington's Body Guard.
Subsection 2830.1932. 52pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: The Worker; publications of the Communist Party of Canada; subscription lists.
36
Frame
0473
0477
0483
0485
0492
0526
0546
0552
0558
0726
0735
0894
1040
Subsection 2832.1932.4pp. .
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in New Jersey; strikes.
Subsection 2835. 1933. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Communist propaganda among Civilian Conservation Corps workers.
Subsection 2835. Previously Restricted Materials. 1933. 2pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: CPUS A planned organization of Civilian Conservation Corps workers.
Subsection 2836. 1933-1934. 7pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Finnish immigrants; Communist activities in Michigan; anti-Communist activities;
American Legion.
Subsection 2836. Previously Restricted Materials. 1933-1934. 34pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Finnish immigrants; Communist activities in Michigan; Communist summer camps
and youth activities; state red flag laws.
Subsection 2837. 1933. 20pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities among U.S. Navy personnel; propaganda efforts; publications;
anti-war movement
Subsection 2838. 1933. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: El Communista; radical publications in Honduras; Caribbean Bureau of the Comintern.
Subsection 2839.1933. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: The New Masses; National Americanization Committee of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars of the United States.
Subsection 2840, Section 1. 1933-1936. 168pp.
People: Earl Browder; Vito Marcantonio; William Z. Foster; Ralph M. Easley; Archibald E.
Stevenson.
Subjects: Protests against jailing of Communists in Terre Haute, Indiana; CPUSA election
campaigns; mass meetings; IWO; American League Against War and Fascism; ILD; radio
broadcasts; anti-Communist activities; CPUSA publications; Comintern publications; Communist and anti-Communist activities in Cuba; National Recovery Administration.
Subsection 2840, Section 1. Previously Restricted Materials. 1933-1936. 9pp. [file folder
omitted]
People: Earl Browder; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: CPUSA election campaigns; National Recovery Administration; publications.
Subsection 2840, Section 2. 1936-1939. 159pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; William Randolph Hearst.
Subjects: Protests against U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; indictment of
CPUSA officials; passport violations; CPUSA publications; CPUSA election campaigns;
protests against jailing of Communists in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Subsection 2840, Section 3. 1939-1940. 146pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; William Schneiderman.
Subjects: Naturalizations; passport violations; protests against arrest and conviction of CPUSA
officials; mass meetings; anti-Semitism; pro-German and anti-Communist activities; U.S.
Congress Committee on Un-American Activities.
Subsection 2840, Section 3. Previously Restricted Materials. 1939. Ip. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Passport matter.
37
Frame
1041
1064
1074
Subsection 2840, Section 4.1940-1944.23pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Earl Browder; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Internal security matters; Comintern; Spanish Civil War veterans; protests against
prosecution of CPUS A officials; antiwar movement
Subsection 2841.1933-1934. 10pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Young Communist League; antiwar movement; publications.
Subsection 2842.1933-1935. 137pp.
People: Leon Tourian.
Subjects: Assassination of Archbishop Leon Tourian; Armenian Church of America; Armenian
immigrants in the United States.
Reel 23
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 2843.1933-1934.13pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist propaganda; Polish immigrants; Comintern; American technical advisors
in the USSR.
0014
Subsection 2844. 1934.45pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Cuba; demonstrations at Cuban consulate in New York City;
Comintern; union organization and strikes in Cuba; USSR publications.
0059
Subsection 2845. 1934. 21pp.
People: Leon Tourian.
Subjects: Soviet espionage in Finland; assassination of Archbishop Leon Tourian; Armenian
Church of America; Armenian immigrants; diplomatic personnel of the USSR in Finland.
0080
Subsection 2846.1934.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Workers' Unity League of Canada; Communist Party of Canada; Comintern.
0084
Subsection 2847.1934.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Demonstrations at Hungarian consulates in the United States; Communist activities.
0088
Subsection 2847. Previously Restricted Materials. 1934. 5pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Demonstrations at Hungarian consulates in the United States; Communist activities.
0093
Subsection 2848. 1934. 8pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: United Farmers League of America.
0101
Subsection 2849. 1934. 3pp.
People: Roy Gogan.
Subject: ILD.
0104
Subsection 2850.1934. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Yugoslavian immigrants; protest against Fascist activities by Yugoslavian consulate
in Chicago, Illinois; mass meetings.
0109
Subsection 2851.1934. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Citizen's Emergency League; National Recovery Administration; U.S. Congress
Committee on Un-American Activities.
0115
Subsection 2851. Previously Restricted Materials. 1934.12pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
38
Frame
0127
0132
0146
0150
0165
0169
0171
0178
0182
0201
0218
0221
0232
0238
0245
Subjects: U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Actvities; Communist activities in Los
Angeles, California; general strikes; U.S. Naval Intelligence Division.
Subsection 2853.1934. 5pp.
People: Frank J. Manning.
Subjects: Communist activities in New Jersey; union organization; strikes.
Subsection 2854. 1934-1935. 14pp.
People: Charles Krumbein.
Subjects: Passport matters; arrests and jailing of CPUSA officials; union organization.
Subsection 2855. 1934. 4pp.
People: Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Subjects: Japanese Communist activities in the United States; planned assassination of the U.S.
president; U.S. Naval Intelligence Division.
Subsection 2856. 1934. 15pp.
People: Otto C. Jungworth; Charles R. Ringo.
Subjects: American visitors to the USSR; Communist activities in California; Friends of the
Soviet Union; ILD.
Subsection 2859.1934.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: National Unemployed Council; alleged Communist activities in the United States.
Subsection 2861.1934.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Sacramento, California, Workers School; state criminal syndicalism laws.
Subsection 2862.1934.7pp.
People: Philip Van Gelder; John Green.
Subjects: Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers of America; union organization; strikes; Communist activities in the United States; U.S. Naval Intelligence Division.
Subsection 2864. 1934-1935. 4pp.
People: Alexander Holtzoff.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Justice investigations of Communist activities.
Subsection 2864. Previously Restricted Materials. 1935-1938. 19pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Alexander Holtzoff.
Subjects: American Defenders; Fascist activities; CPUSA publications; Comintern; U.S.
Department of Justice investigations of Communist activities; The Daily Worker.
Subsection 2865.1935-1937. 17pp.
People: Lucien Koch.
Subjects: Commonwealth College; Works Progress Administration student aid; Communist
activities in Arkansas; state criminal syndicalism laws.
Subsection 2867.1935. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Alleged Communist activities among laborers on public works projects.
Subsection 2868. 1935. 11pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: List of persons protesting refusal to allow mass meetings in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Subsection 2869. 1935. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subject: Alleged Communist activities among federal employees.
Subsection 2869. Previously Restricted Materials. 1935. 7pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Alleged Communist activities among federal employees.
Subsection 2870. 1935. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: American League Against War and Fascism; anti-Communist activities.
39
Frame
0250
Subsection 2871, Section 1. 1935-1941. 294pp.
People: Anastase A. Vonsiatsky.
Subjects: Russian National Revolutionary Party; Russian immigrants; registration of foreign
agents in the United States; Fascist activities; anti-Communist activities; German-American
Bund; U.S. relations with the USSR; Japanese activities in the United States; anti-Semitism;
U.S. Department of State investigations in the United States; IWO; Friends of the Soviet Union.
0544
Subsection 2871, Section 1. Previously Restricted Materials. 1937-1941. 37pp. [file folder
omitted]
People: Anastase A. Vonsiatsky; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Russian National Revolutionary Party; registration of foreign agents in the United
States; Fascist activities.
0581
Subsection 2872. Previously Restricted Materials. 1935. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist activities in Alaska; Japanese activities in the United States.
0583
Subsection 2873. 1935. 5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: ILD; CPUSA.
0588
Subsection 2874.1935. 6pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Communist activities in Alabama; union organization; Communist activities among
black Americans.
[Frames 0594-0787 omitted.]
0788
Subsection 2878. 1936-1944. 62pp.
People: Herman Michelson; William E. Browder; Charles E. Coughlin; James True.
Subjects: New Masses; registration of foreign agents in the United States; protests against U.S.
Department of Justice investigations; CPUSA; U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American
Activities; Fascist activities; anti-Semitism; Ku Klux Klan.
0850
Subsection 2878. Previously Restricted Materials. 1936-1948. 173pp.
People: Howard Fast; A. B. Magill; Simon Gerson; Bruce Minton; Ruth McKenny; V. J.
Jerome; Eugene Dennis; William Z. Foster; J. Edgar Hoover; James True; Joseph Freeman.
Subjects: New Masses; U.S. Department of Justice investigations; mass meetings; financial
matters affecting the magazine and lists of donations; CPUSA factionalism and internal matters;
U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; Fascist activities; anti-Communist
activities; registration of foreign agents in the United States.
1023
Subsection 2881. 1937-1939. 11pp.
People: Charles E. Coughlin.
Subjects: Social Justice; protests against publications.
1034
Subsection 2885. 1937. 5pp.
People: John B. Trevor.
Subjects: American Coalition of Patriotic, Civic, and Fraternal Societies; protests against
publications.
1039
Subsection 2886. 1937-1938. 24pp.
People: Mark Anthony Bracegirdle.
Subjects: Radical activities in Ceylon; deportations of British subjects from Ceylon.
1063
Subsection 2887. 1938. 3pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Independent Communist Labor League; U.S. Naval Intelligence Division; U.S. Post
Office Department censorship.
1066
Subsection 2890. 1938-1939. 7pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Jonathan Eddy; J. Edgar Hoover; Herman Dinsmore; Herbert French; Leonard
Goldsmith.
Subjects: American Newspaper Guild; U.S. Department of Justice investigations of Communist
activities of newspapermen at The New York Times; union organization.
40
Frame
1073
Subsection 2891.1934-1954. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: IWO; U.S. Department of Justice prosecutions before the Subversive Activities
Control Board; anti-Communist activities; ILD; CPUSA.
Reel 24
Straight Numerical File•Previously Restricted Materials
[Note: These files were recently reviewed and opened to the public, but are filed separately at the National
Archives. With a few exceptions, the file folders for this material were not available and therefore were not
filmed.]
Casefile 202600•General
0001
Section 6. 1930. 100pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Publications; anti-Communist activities; Communist activities in the United States
and Latin America; Seventh Congress of the Comintern; Russian immigrants to the United
States and Canada; mass meetings; Communist activities among black Americans; CPUSA;
Young Communist League; union organization; antiwar movement; U.S. Congress legislation;
May Day; TUUL; unemployment; state criminal syndicalism laws.
0101
Section 7. 1930. 64pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Jay Lovestone; Benjamin Gitlow; Bertram D. Wolfe; Harry M.
Winitsky; Erich Friedrich Wilhelm Ludendorff.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Post Office Department; CPUSA;
Public Ownership League of America; mass meetings; U.S. Congress investigations of Communist activities; publications; deportations; Communist activities among black Americans;
union organization; antiwar movement; Young Communist League; Fascist activities in
Germany; anti-Communist activities; Communist activities in Colombia.
0165
Section 8. 1930. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: U.S. Naval Intelligence Division; publications; U.S. Congress investigations of
Communist activities and legislation.
0168
Section 9. 1930-1931. 11pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; mass meetings; publications; unemployment; U.S.
Congress investigations of Communist activities and legislation; U.S. Department of Justice
investigations of radical activities in the United States; Comintern.
0179
Section 10. 1931.9pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Anti-Communist activities.
0188
Section 11. 1931.9pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; L. F. Coles.
Subjects: Communist activities in Germany; Communist Party of America; union organization;
Communist activities among black Americans.
0197
Section 12. 1931. 33pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Publications; Young Communist League; Young Men's Christian Association; union
organization; mass meetings; race riots.
0230
Section 13. 1931. 37pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Publications; Communist Party of America election campaigns; mass meetings; union
organization; International Association of Machinists; International Association of Bridge and
Structural Iron Workers; U.S. Naval Intelligence Division; antiwar movement; Young
Communist League; unemployment; TUUL.
41
Frame
0267
0278
0310
0329
0345
0435
0453
0461
0466
0469
0490
0507
0511
Section 16. 1932. 11 pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Pat Toohey.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; American Legion; private detectives; CPUSA; Amtorg
Trading Corporation; union organization; TUUL; Young Pioneers of America; unemployment;
ILD.
Section 18. 1932. 32pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; George Djamgaroff.
Subjects: U.S. Congress investigations of Communist activities; Russian immigrants; Communist activities among black Americans; anti-Communist activities in the United States; deportations; publications; American technical advisors in Soviet Russia; U.S. Department of Justice
raids.
Section 19. 1932. 19pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; George Djamgaroff.
Subjects: Publications; U.S. Naval Intelligence Division; mass meetings; U.S. Congress
investigations of Communist activities; Russian immigrants.
Section 20. 1932-1933. 16pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Motion pictures; Amtorg Trading Corporation; U.S. Congress investigations of
Communist activities.
Section 21. 1933. 90pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Naturalizations; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of
Labor; publications; anti-Communist activities.
Section 22. 1933. 18pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: American Citizens League; anti-Communist activities; Fascist activities; Aliens
Protective League; Committee for Protection of Foreign Bom; mass meetings.
Subsection 22. 1920. 8pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: IWW and Communist activities in Massachusetts; U.S. Department of Justice raids.
Section 23. 1933. 5pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Farmers Holiday Association; mass meetings; National Recovery Administration;
union organization; Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union.
Section 25. 1934. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Amos A. Fries.
Subjects: Publications; anti-Communist activities.
Section 26. 1934. 21pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Mass meetings; CPUSA internal organization; demonstrations at Hungarian consulates in the United States; ILD; Communist activities among black Americans.
Section 27. 1934. 17pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; William Z. Foster.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; CPUSA Agitation-Propaganda Department; Ku Klux
Klan; CPUSA publications; Young Communist League.
Section 28. 1934.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: n.a.
Section 29. 1934. 53pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Antiwar movement; publications; Socialist Labor Party of America; U.S. Naval
Intelligence Division; Communist activities in the Pacific Northwest; May Day; CPUSA
election campaigns; union organization; unemployment; Communist activities in the U.S.
armed forces; CPUSA internal organization.
42
Frame
0564
Section 30. 1934. 14pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Unemployment; mass meetings; radical activities in Mexico; Young Communist
League; publications.
0578
Section 31. 1934. 8pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: U.S. Department of Justice investigations.
0586
Section 32. 1934. 36pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Russian immigrants; anti-Communist activities; Soviet agents in the United States;
union organization; American visitors to the USSR; Communist activities in the U.S. armed
forces; Citizens Law and Order League of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
[Note: Section 33 was filed with the Straight Numerical Files; the folder is located at Reel 8, frame 0588 on
p. 8 of this guide.]
0622
Section 34. 1934-1935. 41pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: State criminal syndicalism laws; general strikes; publications; union organization;
Communist activities in the U.S. armed forces; U.S. Congress investigations of Communist
activities.
0663
Section 35. 1935. 38pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: American League Against War and Fascism; U.S. Congress Committee on UnAmerican Activities; union organization; radio broadcasts; anti-Communist activities; Friends
of the Soviet Union; publications; Russian immigrants.
0701
Section 37. 1935.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Russian immigrants; anti-Communist activities.
0705
Section 39. 1935. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Deportations; Communist activities in Cuba.
0707
Section 40. 1935. 22pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Frank Farley.
Subjects: CPUSA internal organization; Comintern; union organization; Marine Workers
Industrial Union; Soviet agents in the United States; publications.
0729
Section 42. 1935. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Soviet agents in the United States.
0732
Section 43. 1935. 5pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Friends of the Soviet Union; Profintem; American visitors to the USSR.
0737
Section 46. 1936. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Seventh Congress of the Comintern.
0739
Section 48. 1937.2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: American Legion; anti-Communist activities.
0741
Section 50. 1937. 15pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Anastase A. Vonsiatsky.
Subjects: IWO; Fascist activities; Russian National Revolutionary Party; Friends of the Soviet
Union; Communist activities in Oklahoma.
0756
Section 51. 1937. 8pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist activities in Pennsylvania; anti-Communist activities.
43
Frame
0764
0769
0771
0774
0786
Section 53. 1938. 5pp.
People: Emil Mazey; Edward Hall; Windham Mortimer; George Addes; Richard T.
Frankensteen.
Subjects: United Automobile Workers of America; union organization.
Section 55. 1939. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: n.a.
Section 56. 1939. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Cooperation between U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Department of the
Treasury; anti-Communist activities; American Legion.
Section 62. 1939. 12pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; William E. Browder; Fritz Kuhn; Leon Trotsky; Diego Rivera.
Subjects: U.S. Congress Committee on Un-American Activities; CPUSA financial matters;
Fascist activities in the United States; German-American Bund; Communist activities in
Mexico.
Section 64. 1940. 9pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Edward H. Hunter.
Subjects: Communist activities in California state relief agencies; anti-Communist activities;
anti-Semitism; Fascist activities in the United States.
Casefile 202600•States
0795
Subsection 3. Arizona. 1935. 10pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Earl Browder; William Z. Foster; George Dimitroff.
Subjects: Seventh Congress of the Comintern; CPUSA internal organization; publications.
0805
Subsection 7. Connecticut. 1920. 5pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: U.S. Department of Justice raids; deportations.
0810
Subsection 10. Florida. 1920-1934. 19pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist activities in Florida; Cigar Makers International Union; violence in labor
disputes; unemployment; race riots; deportations.
0829
Subsection 14. Illinois. 1920. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: U.S. Congress legislation; anti-Communist activities in Illinois.
0831
Subsection 15. Indiana. 1920-1921. 9pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist activities in Indiana; union organization; IWW; deportations.
0840
Subsection 16. Iowa. 1920. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Socialist Party of America election campaigns in Iowa; passport matters.
[Subsection 22 appears at Frame 0453]
0841
Subsection 28. Nebraska. 1920. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Naturalizations in Montana; radical activities in Nebraska.
0844
Subsection 30. New Hampshire. 1920-1921. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Radical activities in New Hampshire; publications; Tulsa, Oklahoma race riots;
Communist Party of America.
0847
Subsection 31. New Jersey. 1920. 27pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Anarchist and Communist activities in New Jersey; U.S. relations with Soviet Russia;
Russian immigrants in the United States; deportations; union organization; radical activities in
New Jersey.
44
Frame
[Note: Subsection 33 was filed with the Straight Numerical Files; the folder is located at Reel 14, frame
0617 on p. 15 of this guide.]
0874
Subsection 36. Ohio. 1920.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; William D. Hay wood.
Subjects: Strikes and union organization in Ohio; IWW; U.S. Department of Justice raids;
Socialist Labor Party of America; publications.
0878
Subsection 37. Oklahoma. 1919. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Socialist activities and IWW in Oklahoma.
Casefile 202600•Subjects
0881
Subsection 58. 1931-1932. 30pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist propaganda in Mexico; ILD; labor relations in Mexico; Communist
activities in Ecuador; Comintern.
Reel 25
Straight Numerical File•Previously Restricted Materials cont.
Casefile 202600•Subjects cont
0001
Subsection 59, Section 1. 1920-1930. 22pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Ralph M. Easley; Archibald E. Stevenson; Matthew Woll.
Subjects: Bills introduced to suppress those who wish to violently overthrow the government;
U.S. Congress legislation; anti-Communist activities; U.S. Department of Justice investigations; deportations; IWW.
0023
Subsection 59, Section 2. 1930-1934. 6pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Archibald E. Stevenson; Earl Browder; Benjamin Gitlow.
Subjects: Bills suggested to suppress those who wish to violently overthrow the government;
U.S. Congress legislation; anti-Communist activities; Comintern; CPUSA.
0029
Subsection 67. 1920. 10pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; John Jackson; Timothy F. Nolan.
Subjects: Deportations; habeas corpus proceedings.
0039
Subsection 78. 1920. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; John Smith; Louis F. Post
Subjects: Naturalizations; U.S. Department of Labor cooperation with U.S. Department of
Justice.
0041
Subsection 95. 1919. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Eduardo Parades.
Subject: Exposure of U.S. Department of Justice confidential informant in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
0043
Subsection 279. 1930. 8pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Young Pioneers of America; publications; Boy Scouts of America; mass meetings;
antiwar movement
0051
Subsection 282.1920. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist activities; publications.
0054
Subsection 418, Section 1. 1921-1927. 123pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; mass meetings; publications; the International Anarchist Group;
protests against Massachusetts state prosecution of Sacco-Vanzetti case; Workers (Communist)
Party of America.
45
Frame
0177
0179
0198
0209
0218
0279
0291
0297
0302
0305
0444
0449
0454
0458
0460
Subsection 418, Section 2.1927. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; American Civil Liberties Union; requests for release of U.S.
Department of Justice files on Sacco-Vanzetti case.
Subsection 418, Section 3. 1927.19pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; mass meetings; ILD; Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee;
appeals for U.S. intervention in case.
Subsection 418, Section 4.1927.11pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; mass meetings; anti-Communist activities.
Subsection 418, Section 5. 1927.9pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Arthur Garfield Hays; Francis Fisher Kane.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; mass meetings.
Subsection 418, Section 6. 1927. 61pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Fund; mass meetings; union organization; deportations; American Civil Liberties Union; state criminal syndicalism laws; ILD;
Workers (Communist) Party of America.
Subsection 418, Section 7.1927-1929. 12pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Sacco-Vanzetti case; U.S. Department of Justice investigations; mass meetings.
Subsection 457. 1920. 6pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Soviet Russian official publications; Russian Soviet Government Bureau; New York
Public Library.
Subsection 634. 1921-1923. 5pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; William Thomas Colyer; Frank Mack.
Subjects: Habeas corpus proceedings; deportations; Communist Party of America.
Subsection 779. 1928. 3pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: U.S. Department of Justice investigations.
Subsection 823, Section 6. 1920-1926. 139pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Roger N. Baldwin; Albert DeSilver; Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Agnes
Brown Leach; Florence Kelley.
Subjects: American Civil Liberties Union; anti-Communist activities; IWW; mailing lists of the
ACLU; mass meetings; amnesty requests for political prisoners; deportations; legal defense
efforts; minutes of meetings of the executive committee.
Subsection 839. 1921. 5pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Radical literature imported into the United States.
Subsection 882, Section 1.1921. 5pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Communist Party of America internal organization and distribution of publications.
Subsection 989. 1921.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Charles S. McFarland; Sidney L. Gulick.
Subjects: Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America; U.S. Department of Justice
investigations.
Subsection 1012.1921.2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Radical literature imported into the United States.
Subsection 1043. 1921.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Tomas Rakocevich.
Subject: Yugoslavian immigrants.
46
Frame
0464
0466
0607
0608
0609
0619
0634
0713
0715
0731
0776
0783
0785
0793
0799
Subsection 1212.1933.2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Anti-imperialistic League of the United States; Japanese activities in the United
States and Korea.
Subsection 1235. 1917-1921. 141pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; V. I. Lenin.
Subjects: Communist activities in Germany; Comintern; Soviet Russian diplomatic relations
with Germany.
Subsection 1366.1932. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Soviet activities in China; U.S. Treasury Department cooperation with U.S.
Department of Justice.
Subsection 1525.1930-1931. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Young Communist League; mass meetings; American Legion; anti-Communist
activities; summer youth camps.
Subsection 1628.1929. 10pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: "The Red Worker."
Subsection 1855. 1926-1927. 15pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Finnish language publications in Wisconsin; anti-Communist activities in Michigan;
Finnish immigrants.
Subsection 2005, Special Section Bureau Papers Only. 1921. 79pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Finnish Socialist Federation; Socialist Party of America; Finnish immigrants.
Subsection 2105. 1940. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Workers Alliance of California; antiwar movement.
Subsection 2265. 1922-1937. 16pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Archibald E. Stevenson.
Subjects: CPUSA; U.S. Department of Justice investigations; anti-Communist activities; use of
injunctions in labor disputes; New Jersey state laws against radical activities; naturalizations.
Subsection 2297, Section 1. 1930.45pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Matthew Woll.
Subjects: Soviet propaganda and subversion; conditions in Soviet Russia; Soviet agents in the
United States, Mexico, and Venezuela; anti-Communist activities; Comintern; Profintem.
Subsection 2401. 1934. 7pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Leon Trotsky.
Subject: Reports that Leon Trotsky was in United States.
Subsection 2562. 1928. 2pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Calogero Speziale.
Subject: Italian anarchists in the United States.
Subsection 2707. 1929-1930. 8pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Communist schools in Massachusetts; Young Communist Training School; Workers
International Relief.
Subsection 2718. 1925. 6pp.
People : J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Young Workers League; importing of radical literature into the United States.
Subsection 2728.1924-1927. 19pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Francis Ralston Welsh; James P. Cannon; William F. Dunn; J. Louis
Engdahl; Benjamin Gitlow; William Z. Foster; Jay Lovestone; Charles E. Ruthenberg;
Meissaye J. Olgin; Max Bedacht.
47
Frame
Subjects: Woikers (Communist) Party of America; mass meetings; Comintern; U.S. Department of Justice raids; American visitors to Soviet Russia; state and local prosecutions of
radicals; publications; anti-Communist activities.
0818
Subsection 2734.1923-1932. 22pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; William Z. Foster; Robert Minor.
Subjects: Logan Act prosecutions for Communist activities; state and local prosecutions of
radicals.
0840
Subsection 2741.1928.17pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Charles E. Ruthenberg.
Subject: Workers (Communist) Party of America foreign language publications in the United
States.
0857
Subsection 2751.1925.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Radical Italian language publications in the United States.
0861
Subsection 2754. 1925. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: Radical propaganda in the U.S.
0862
Subsection 2755.1925. 6pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Francis Ralston Welsh.
Subjects: Anti-Communist activities; Workers (Communist) Party of America publications;
Comintern.
[Note: Subsections 2760,2761, 2762,2764,2765, and 2778 were filed with the Straight Numerical Files,
and are located on Reel 21, frames 0097, 0117, 0120, 0172,0264, and 0411 respectively. Entries for these
files can be found on p. 31 of this guide.]
0868
Subsection 2787. 1928. Ip.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Soviet agents in the United States; Trade Union Educational League; importing of
Russian literature into the United States.
Reel 26
Straight Numerncal File
Casefile 203557
0001
1919-1920. 149pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Deportations; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor;
Union of Russian Workers membership in the United States; U.S. Department of Justice raids;
anti-Communist activities.
Casefile 203773
0150
1919.4pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Baghdad Commercial Committee; British occupation of Baghdad.
Casefile 204767
0154
1919. 11pp.
People: William Z. Foster.
Subjects: Syndicalists' League of North America publications; union organization of iron and
steel workers.
Casefile 205272
0165
1919.5pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Radical publications; Workers' Industrial Educational Club; IWW.
48
Frame
Casefile 205492
0170
Subsection 1. 1920.13pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Gertrude C. Harman; Louis F. Post.
Subjects: Complaints against the U.S. Department of Justice in connection with the deportation
of Communists at Kansas City, Kansas; U.S. Department of Justice raids; U.S. Congress
investigations of the U.S. Department of Justice.
0183
Subsection 3.1920.2pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Deportations; habeas corpus proceedings.
0185
Section 1.1919-1920.277pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Rose Baron; John Reed.
Subjects: Communist Party of America; deportations; Communist Labor Party of America;
habeas corpus proceedings; publications; Union of Russian Workers; Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor;
U.S. Department of Justice raids; Espionage Act violations; election boycotts.
0466
Section 2. 1920. 340pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; A. W. Richter; Joseph A. Padway; Maude Swartz; Louis C. Fraina;
William B. Wilson; William Thomas Colyer; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subjects: Communist Party of America; deportations; habeas corpus proceedings; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor; IWW; Communist Labor Party of
America; Socialist Party of America; legal defense efforts in Wisconsin; Comintern; Women's
Trade Union League; protests against deportations and U.S. Department of Justice raids; mass
meetings; union organization; Union of Russian Workers; Communist activities in Mexico;
International Association of Machinists; anti-Communist activities; Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; private detective agencies.
Reel 27
Straight Numerical File cont.
Casefile 205492 cont.
0001
Section 3. 1920. 333pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Felix Frankfurter; Zechariah Chaffee, Jr.; William Thomas Colyer;
Louis C. Fraina; Isaac E. Ferguson; Gertrude C. Harman.
Subjects: Communist Labor Party of America; Communist Party of America; deportations;
habeas corpus proceedings; U.S. Department of Justice raids; U.S. Department of Justice
response to the Committee of Distinguished Members of the American Bar, "Report On the
Illegal Practices of the Department of Justice"; U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S.
Department of Justice; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with the U.S. Department of
Labor; union organization; publications; IWW; legal defense efforts; Comintern; Socialist Party
of America of America; Socialist Labor Party; Union of Russian Workers.
0334
Section 4. 1920-1921. 148pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Louis F. Post; William Thomas Colyer; Martin Abem.
Subjects: Deportations; anarchists; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor; American immigrants to Soviet Russia; habeas corpus proceedings; Union of
Russian Workers; IWW; U.S. Department of Justice raids; publications; Communist Party of
America; Communist Labor Party of America; legal defense efforts; union organization;
strikes; United Communist Party of America.
Casefile 206924
0482
1920.50pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; James Larkin.
Subjects: New York. State Anarchy Law prosecutions; Independent Labour Party of Great
Britain; Comintern; Communist Party of America; deportations; U.S. Department of Justice
assistance for state prosecutions; lists of delegates to Left Wing Conference of the Socialist
Party of America; Irish Transport Workers Union; South African Labor Party.
49
Frame
Casefile 207682
0532
1920.4pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Harry M. Winitsky; Benjamin Gitlow; James Larkin.
Subjects: New York State Anarchy Law prosecutions; U.S. Department of Justice assistance for
state prosecutions; Left Wing Conference of the Socialist Party of America.
Casefile 209264
0536
1920-1921.85pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Louis F. Post; Francis Ralston Welsh; Ralph M. Easley.
Subjects: U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S. Department of Justice; U.S. Department of
Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor; U.S. Department of Justice raids; deportations; United Communist Party of America; publications; anti-Communist activities; Communist Party of America; Communist Labor Party of America; union organization.
0621
Previously Restricted Materials. 1920.47pp.
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Louis F. Post; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens.
Subjects: U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S. Department of Justice; U.S. Department of
Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor; U.S. Department of Justice raids; deportations; Communist Labor Party of America; Bureau of Investigation report on assistant secretary
of labor; publications; U.S. Post Office Department censorship; The Public^
Casefile 212097
0668
1924. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Russian relief efforts; All Russian Jewish Public Committee; Russian immigrants.
0680
1925-1926. 11pp.
People: Moissaye J. Olgin; Dwight Braman.
Subjects: Workers (Communist) Party of America; publications; Communist activities in Cuba;
American visitors to Soviet Russia; anti-Communist activities.
Classified Subject File
Casefile 9-5-1436
0691
1918. 12pp.
People: Alexander L. Trachtenberg.
Subjects: Socialist Party of America; publications; antiwar movement.
Casefile 9-12-695
0703
1919-1921. 12pp.
People: n.a.
Subjects: Intercollegiate Socialist Society; publications; U.S. Post Office Department
censorship.
0715
Temporary Section. 1921. 21pp.
People: Elizabeth Gurley Flynn; Rose Pastor Stokes; Chandler Owen.
Subjects: Intercollegiate Socialist Society; Conference on Labor and the World Crisis.
Casefile 9-12-707
0736
1918-1922.41pp.
People: Jack Carney; Victor L. Berger; Oscar Ameringer.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; antiwar movement; publications; The Truth;
Communist Labor Party of America; Socialist Party of America election campaigns.
0777
Previously Restricted Materials. 1920-1921.10pp. [file folder omitted]
People: J. Edgar Hoover; Jack Carney.
Subjects: Deportations; IWW; publications; The Industrial Worker; The Truth.
50
Frame
Cásenle 9-12-728
0787
1919-1921.51pp.
People: Louis F. Post; Ellis Searles.
Subjects: Unemployment; Rand School of Social Science; IWW; Communist Party of America;
distribution of radical literature; U.S. Congress investigations of the U.S. Department of
Justice; deportations; U.S. Department of Justice cooperation with U.S. Department of Labor;
union organization.
Casefile 9-12-758
0838
1919-1921.91pp.
People: Leonard Mins; Carlo Tresca; Boris Reinstein; James P. Cannon; Michael Bakunin;
Robert Minor; Eugene V. Debs.
Subjects: The Toiler; IWW; distribution of radical literature; Friends of Soviet Russia; Workers
National Defense Committee; United Communist Party of America; Socialist Labor Party of
America; unemployment; Comintern; Rand School of Social Science; importation of radical
literature into the United States; mass meetings; union organization; Communist Labor Party of
Ohio.
Reel 28
Classified Subject File cont.
Casefile 9-12-801
0001
1920-1921.29pp.
People: V. I. Lenin.
Subjects: Publications; distribution of radical literature; United Communist Party of America;
Communist Party of America.
Casefile 9-19-375
0030
1918-1921. 110pp.
People: Morris Zucker; J. Edgar Hoover; Albert DeSilver.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; freedom of speech issues; Left Wing Section of the
Socialist Party of America; Communist Labor Party of America; mass meetings; Russian
immigrants; U.S. Supreme Court cases; presidential pardons; National Civil Liberties Bureau;
legal defense efforts.
0140
Special Section Bureau Papers Only. 1917-1920. 25pp.
People: Morris Zucker; Benjamin Gitlow; James Larkin; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; freedom of speech issues; Russian immigrants; Communist Labor Party of America; Communist Party of America; publications.
0165
Previously Restricted Materials. 1921.2pp. [file folder omitted]
People: Morris Zucker; Nathan Chabrow; J. Edgar Hoover.
Subject: American visitors to Soviet Russia.
Casefile 9-19-603
0167
Section 1.1917-1919.220pp.
People: Kate Richards O'Hare; Victor L. Berger; Morris Hillquit; Patrick Quinlan; Charles E.
Ruthenberg; Algernon Lee; Paul J. Furnias; Rose Pastor Stokes.
Subjects: Espionage act prosecutions; Missouri State Penitentiary prisoners; freedom of speech
issues; legal defense efforts; Socialist Party of America convention in St. Louis, Missouri;
radical activities among women; publications; National Civil Liberties Bureau; protests against
U.S. Department of Justice prosecutions; presidential pardons.
0387
Section 2. 1917-1922.219pp.
People: Kate Richards O'Hare; William D. Haywood; Eugene V. Debs; Rose Pastor Stokes.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; Missouri State Penitentiary prisoners; freedom of speech
issues; protests against U.S. Department of Justice prosecutions; mass meetings; radical
51
Frame
activities among women; IWW; union organization; American visitors to Soviet Russia;
Socialist Party of America; legal defense efforts; presidential pardons; publications; NoaPartisan League of North Dakota; antiwar movement.
0606
Previously Restricted Materials. 1921.30pp.
People: Kate Richards O'Hare; Katherine Debs; Eugene V. Debs.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; Missouri State Penitentiary prisoners; publications; The
National Rip-Saw; radical activities among women; mass meetings; freedom of speech issues;
IWW; Non-Partisan League; Socialist Party of America; May Day; antiwar movement.
Cásenle 9-19-1492
0636
1919.13pp.
People: John J. Ballam.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; freedom of speech issues; IWW; Socialist Party of
America; mass meetings; antiwar movement; Socialist Labor Party of America.
Casefile 9-19-1755
0649
Section 1. 1918-1921.200pp.
People: Rose Pastor Stokes; J. G. Phelps Stokes; Ludwig C. A. K. Martens; Santeri Nuorteva;
Isaac E. Ferguson; Jay Lovestone; Harry M. Winitsky; Ralph M. Easley; Woodrow Wilson;
Charlotte Perkins Oilman.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; mass meetings; Friends of Soviet Russia; freedom of
speech issues; radical activities among women; antiwar movement; Communist Party of
America; Russian immigrants; Russian Soviet Government Bureau officials; publications;
presidential pardons; legal defense efforts; anti-Communist activities; protests against U.S.
Department of Justice prosecutions.
0849
Section 2. 1921-1926.47pp.
People: Rose Pastor Stokes; Eugene V. Debs; Jeanette D. Pearl.
Subjects: Espionage Act prosecutions; legal defense efforts; American Legion; anti-Communist
activities; freedom of speech issues; radical activities among women; mass meetings.
0896
Previously Restricted Materials. 1918-1921.21pp.
People: Rose Pastor Stokes; Jeanette D. Pearl.
Subjects: Radical activities; mass meetings; American Legion; anti-Communist activities;
freedom of speech issues; radical activities among women; antiwar movement
52
SUBJECT INDEX
The following index is a guide to the people and subjects found in the Department ofJustice Investigative Files, Part II:
The Communist Party. The first number after each entry or subentry refers to the microfilm reel, and the four-digit number
following the colon refers to the frame number where a particular casefile begins. Hence, 9: 0835 directs the researcher to
the section of a casefile beginning at Frame 0835 of Reel 9. By referring to the reel index of this guide, the researcher will
find the casefile number or section number and lists of the people and subjects in that casefile. The people and subjects are
listed in the order that they appear on the microfilm.
Abeel, Charles
16: 0024
Abern, Martin
27: 0334
Abraham Lincoln Brigade
12: 0457
Abramowitch, Martin
15: 0861
Addams, Jane
16: 0453
Addes, George
24:0764
Africa
German activities in 8: 0389
Agricultural workers
4: 0448,0658; 6: 0604; 7: 0136,0385,0525,0781;
8: 0208,0389,0608,0810; 9: 0601; 10: 0001,
0165, 0360; 13:0202; 15: 0232,0359; 21: 0852;
22: 0001, 0015; 23: 0093; 24: 0461
Alabama
Communist activities 23: 0588
general 13: 0504
Alaska
Communist activities 21: 0411,0453, 0552;
23:0581
state legislation 19: 0057
Alaska Native Brotherhood of Alaska
21:0453
Aliens Protective League
24: 0435
All American Anti-Imperialist League
21:0485
AU Russian Jewish Public Committee
27:0668
Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America
6: 0290; 11: 0519; 13: 0652; 14: 0212
American Agency
14: 0212
American Bureau
18:0691
American Chemical Society
expulsion of member 15: 0906
American Citizens League
24: 0435
American Civil Liberties Union
4: 0001; 9: 0001; 12: 0987; 13: 0001; 14: 0212;
15: 0768, 0889; 17: 0680, 0769; 20: 0434, 0894,
0957; 21: 0333, 0355; 25: 0177, 0218,0305
see also National Civil Liberties Bureau
American Coalition of Patriotic, Civic, and Fraternal
Societies
23:1034
American Committee for Russian Famine Relief
18: 0700
American Communications Association
12:0307
American Defenders
23: 0182
American Federation of Labor
federal labor unions 15: 0232
general 9: 0835; 13: 0561; 20: 0854
Southern Organizing Campaign 3: 0386
American Fund for Public Service
20:0431
Americanization work
Young Men's Christian Association 2: 0832
American Labor Alliance
Jewish Federation of 18: 0964
American Labor party
13:0001
American League Against War and Fascism
7: 0958; 8: 0389, 0608,0810, 1017; 9: 0001, 0148;
15: 0232; 22: 0044, 0558; 23: 0245
American Legion
12: 0854; 13: 0001, 0504, 0511, 0519,0609, 0652,
0717,0785; 14: 0900; 21: 0679; 22: 0001, 0333,
0485; 24: 0267, 0771; 25: 0608; 28: 0849, 0896
American Newspaper Guild
15:0232; 23:1066
American Relief Administration
20:0335
53
^
Cuba 22: 0558
Finland 5: 0871
Germany 4: 0872; 19: 0422; 20: 0384
Greece 4: 0658
Guatemala 5:0215
Latvia 5: 0001,0443, 0871; 18: 0774
Mexico 21: 0001
Poland 4:0658
United States 1: 1069; 2: 0001-0472, 0832;
3: 0001-0880; 4: 0001,0872; 5: 0215-0871;
6: 0001-0945; 7: 0001-0958; 8: 0001-1017;
9: 0001-0835; 10:0001-0732; 11:00010907; 12: 0001-0987; 13: 0001-0627,0652,
0717-0870, 0900-0950; 14: 0001, 06290837, 0877-0921; 15: 0001,0232, 0597,
0761, 0774, 0788,0806-0825, 0906, 0908,
0936; 17: 0537,0616, 0680; 18: 0470, 0700,
0804,0874; 19: 0151,0171,0214,0800;
20: 0001, 0263,0303, 0312,0384, 0431,
0561, 0613, 0882,0938, 0948, 0957;
21: 0001,0024, 0027, 0097,0120, 0175,
0264,0333,0355,0594, 0673, 0679, 0738,
0793, 0801, 0848; 22: 0015, 0044, 0168,
0410, 0485, 0558, 0735, 0894, 1041;
23: 0132, 0178, 0182, 0245,0250, 0788,
0850,1073; 24: 0001, 0168, 0179, 0267,
0278, 0345, 0435,0466, 0490, 0586, 0663,
0739, 0756, 0771,0786, 0829; 25: 0001,
0023, 0198, 0305,0608, 0619, 0715, 0731,
0799, 0862; 26: 0001, 0466; 27: 0536, 0680;
28:0649, 0849, 0896
Uruguay 10: 0533
laws
Argentina 5: 0871 ; 6: 0290
Australia 3: 0880; 4: 0448
Austria 20: 0869
Brazil 15: 0001; 18: 0437, 0761
Canada 4:0872; 5: 0001,0215, 0871; 21: 0594
Ceylon 11: 0519
Costa Rica 4:0448, 0658
Cuba 18: 0437
Czechoslovakia 17: 0758
Dominican Republic 11: 0001
El Salvador 5: 0638
Estonia 3: 0880; 10: 0533; 17: 0758
Finland 6: 0290; 20: 0223; 21: 0594
France 6: 0290; 20: 0833
Germany 6: 0604
Great Britain 5: 0001
Hungary 11: 0907; 18: 0473
India 4:0001
Ireland 4: 0658, 0872, 1023
Italy 3:0623
Japan 21: 0594
Latvia 15:0786
Lithuania 3: 0880
Luxembourg 5: 0001
Mexico 14: 0959
the Netherlands 2: 0832; 5: 0443
Americans
"Appeal to the American Workers" 18: 0691
arrest of Methodist missionary in USSR IS: 0886
Better America Federation 20: 0312
Committee of Distinguished Members of the
American Bar 2:0216; 14:0001; 27: 0001
German-American Bund 23: 0250; 24: 0774
National Americanization Committee of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States
22:0552
southern nationalism 20: 0968
technical advisors in Soviet Russia 4: 0001 ;
17: 0628; 18: 0700; 19:0214; 21: 0264; 24: 0278
technical advisors in the USSR 19: 0422; 20: 0001;
21: 0594, 0755,0934; 23: 0001
visitors to Soviet Russia 14: 0212, 0694; 17: 0614,
0628; 18: 0832; 19: 0214; 20: 0422; 25: 0799;
27: 0680; 28: 0165,0387
visitors to the USSR 5: 0001; 10: 0001; 19: 0422;
20: 0001; 23: 0150; 24: 0586, 0732
see also Anti-Communist; Deportations; Emigrants;
Immigrants; Race relations; U.S. Congress
American Society of Friends
14: 0694
American Student Union
13: 0202
American Vigilant Intelligence Federation
21: 0793, 0801; 22: 0015
Ameringer, Oscar
27: 0736
Amkino Trading Corporation
21:0175
Amter, Israel
8: 0208,0588; 14: 0212
Amtorg Trading Corporation
4: 0001; 5: 0001, 0638; 6: 0001, 0775; 12: 0307;
13: 0001; 21: 0408, 0594, 0755, 0775; 24: 0267,
0329
Anarchist
activities 21: 0401, 0697, 0703; 24: 0847; 25: 0783;
27: 0334
bombings 3: 0296
conspiracy against United States 20: 0455
international movement 18: 0414; 25: 0054
Italian 20: 0455; 21: 0697,0703; 25: 0783
Spanish 21: 0703
sute legislation 27: 0482, 0532
Anti-American
activities•Honduras 5: 0001
Antianarchist
activities 15: 0800
The Anti-Bolshevist
publications 15: 0825
Anti-Communist
activities
Argentina 5:0215; 10:0533
Belgium 5: 0871
Brazil 10: 0533
Bulgaria 15: 0924
54
Norway 17:0607
Persia 4:0257
Peru 11:0356
the Philippines 5: 0871
Poland 6: 0945; 7:0958
South Africa 2: 0001
Trinidad 5: 0871
Venezuela 10: 0533
Westlndiesl0:0533
see also Communist activities; International Entente
Against the Third International; Raids; State
legislation; U.S. Congress
Anticonscription matters
20: 0460
Anti-Fascist
activities
Germany 5: 0215
Italy 3: 0880; 21: 0823
U.S. 7: 0958; 21: 0823
American League Against War and Fascism
7: 0958; 8: 0389, 0608,0810,1017; 9: 0001,
0148; 15: 0232; 22: 0044, 0558; 23: 0245
Comintern 6: 0290
European Anti-Fascist Congress 6: 0604
Profintern 6: 0604
World Anti-Fascist Society 18: 0804
see also Fascist
Anti-Imperialist League of the U.S.
5: 0215; 25: 0464
Antilynching bill
9: 0148
Anti-Semitism
1: 0452; 7: 0001, 0385,0781; 8: 0608; 9: 0370,
0601,0835; 10: 0001,0135, 0360, 0732;
11: 0195; 12: 0102,0457; 13: 0001; 13: 0870;
14:0617; 15: 0825; 22: 0289, 0894; 23: 0250,
0788; 24:0786
Antiwar
American League Against War and Fascism
7: 0958; 8: 0389, 0608,0810, 1017; 9:0001,
0148; 15: 0232; 22: 0044,0558; 23: 0245
congress•the Netherlands 5: 0638
movement 4: 0257, 0872, 1023; 5: 0001, 0215,
0443,0638; 6: 0001,0290,0604,0775; 7: 0001,
0136, 0958; 8: 0001, 0208, 0389; 9: 0148, 0370,
0601,0835; 10: 0165,0533,0732; 11: 0356,
0519; 12: 0457, 0987; 13: 0001, 0069,0202,
0419; 20: 0418; 21: 0111, 0117, 0120,0284,
0333, 0355, 0506,0519, 0538; 22: 0526, 1041,
1064; 24: 0101,0230, 0511; 25: 0043,0713;
27:0691, 0736; 28: 0387, 0606,0636,0649,
0896
policies•Comintern 3: 0623
War Resistors League 6: 0290
Argentina
anti-Communist activities 5:0215; 10: 0533
anti-Communist laws 5:0871 ; 6: 0290
Communist activities 3: 0880; 4: 0257; 5:0871;
18:0176
deportations 5: 0215; 6: 0290
foreign agents 20: 0613
Arizona
general 13: 0511; 24: 0795
Phoenix Trades Council 18: 0788
Arkansas
Citizens League of Monette 15: 0806
Communist activities 23: 0201
Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad Company
13: 0631
state legislation 23: 0201
see also Commonwealth College
Armenia
immigrants to United States 22:1074; 23: 0059
Armenian Church of America
22:1074; 23: 0059
Arsian, Emir Chakib
18:0882
Assassinations
attempts 15:0875
general 22: 1074; 23: 0059
threats 16: 0024; 20: 0463; 23: 0146
Associated Fanners of California
8:0208,0389,0608,0810
Associated Office and Professional Emergency
Employees
10: 0732
Association for Better Citizenship
4:0448
Australia
anti-Communist laws 3: 0880; 4: 0448
Communist activities 3: 0623; 4: 0448
union organization 20: 0379
Young Communist League 4: 0658
Austria
anti-Communist laws 20: 0869
Bolshevist activities 20: 0828
Communist activities 3: 0880
economic conditions 5: 0215
International Socialist Conference in Vienna
18: 0885
Babson Institute
14: 0830
Baghdad, Iraq
occupation by Great Britain 26:0150
Baghdad Commercial Committee
26:0150
Bakunin, Michael
27: 0838
Baldwin, Roger N.
5: 0001; 13: 0609; 14: 0212; 17: 0566, 0680;
20:0431, 0434, 0894; 25: 0305
Ballam, John J.
20: 0613; 28: 0636
Bankruptcy
Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad Company
13:0631
Banks
see Economics
55
Barnes, Mqjor
21: 0934
Baron, Rose
15: 0453; 26: 0185
Bartel, Heinrich
18:0683
Baum, Paul
4: 0872
Bedacht, Max
13: 0652; 20: 0613; 25: 0799
Belgium
anarchists 21: 0697,0703
anti-Communist activities 5: 0871
Communist activities 6: 0290; 18: 0832
Benjamin, Herbert
19: 0057
Berger, Victor L.
15: 0001; 16: 0217; 27: 0736; 28: 0167
Berkman, Alexander
14: 0694
Berneri, Camillio Luigi Mario
21:0697
Bernstein, Eduard
18:0473
Better America Federation
20:0312
Blacks
see Race relations
Blackstone, Irene Moorman
14:0212
Bloor, Ella Reeve
15: 0913; 20: 0613; 22: 0015
Bolivia
Soviet agents 21: 0420
see also Latin America
Bollens, J. H.
13:0069
Bolshevist
activities
Austria 20: 0828
Eastern Europe 18: 0001
Soviet Russia 18: 0001
agents 17: 0607; 20: 0599, 828,0882
Congress of European Bolshevist Leaders 18: 0473
U.S. Medical Corps 14: 0956
see also Communist activities
Bombings
anarchist 3: 0296
Bonus Army
5: 0638; 6: 0001; 22: 0333
Borodin, Michael
19: 0422
Boycotts
elections 26: 0185
Boy Scouts of America
15: 0936; 21: 0546, 0679; 25: 0043
Bracegirdle, Mark Anthony
23: 1039
Braman, Dwight
27:0680
Bramson, Charles
15:0906
Brazil
anti-Communist activities 10: 0533
anti-Communist laws 15: 0001; 18: 0437,0761
Communist activities 18: 0761
union organization 18: 0761
see also Latin America
Bridges, Marry
9: 0148,0601; 12: 0607, 0745, 0987; 15: 0232
Bridgman, Michigan
convention•Communist Party of America
20:0434,0561,0613
Briehl, Fred
11:0356
British Labour party
17: 0769
British Red Army
18:0001
British Socialist party
18:0001
Brodsky, Carl
8:0208
Brcokwood Labor College
14: 0212; 16:0453; 17: 0001, 0277, 0680
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees
3: 0386
Broun, Heywood
3: 0880; 12: 0307
Browder, Earl
4: 0257; 8: 0588; 9: 0370; 11: 0001; 12: 0001, 0102,
0307, 0854, 0987; 13: 0001,0069, 0202, 0419;
15: 0913; 19: 0090; 20: 0613, 0948; 22: 0558,
0726, 0735, 0894,1040, 1041; 24: 0795;
25: 0023
Browder, William E.
23: 0788; 24: 0774
Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers
16:0044
Buckman, Alexander
21:0594
Buford
see U.S. Army
Bukharin, Nikolai
18: 0774
Bulgaria
anti-Communist activities 15: 0924
Butte, Montana
IWW membership statistics 14: 0830
California
Associated Farmers of California 8: 0208, 0389,
0608,0810
California Conference for Repeal of the Criminal
Syndicalism Act 10: 0001
Communist activités 23: 0115, 0150; 24: 0786
general 13:0519,0627
state legislation 10: 0001; 19: 0057; 23: 0169
56
state relief agencies 13:0419; 24: 0786
Workers Alliance of California 25: 0713
workers school 23: 0169
Caminita, Ladovko
17: 0675
Canada
anarchists 21: 0401
deportations 22: 0594
Lumber Workers' Industrial Union of Canada
20: 0375
Russian immigrants 24: 0001
Socialist activities 5: 0638
union organization 9: 0601
USSR Trade Commission 21: 0386
see also Anti-Communist laws; Communist
activities
Canary Islands
Russian immigrants 22: 0392
Cannon, James P.
14: 0212; 16: 0044; 20: 0613; 25: 0799; 27: 0838
Carey, Robert D.
15: 0365
Caribbean Bureau of the Comintern
22: 0546
see also Latin America
Carney, Jack
27: 0736, 0777
Censorship
books•seizure of 18: 0683
literature•seizure of 19: 0038
mail
deportees 15:0380
general 23: 1063; 27: 0621, 0703
radical prisoners 14: 0923
motion pictures 21: 0175
propaganda•seizure 18: 0700, 0758
publications•wartime 13:0419
Central America
Communist activities 6: 0290
see also entries under individual countries
Ceylon
anti-Communist laws 11: 0519
Communist activities 23: 1039
deportations 23: 1039
Chabrow, Nathan
28: 0165
Chaffee, Zechariah, Jr.
27:0001
Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York
7:0001
Chambers, J. E.
19: 0038
Chase National Bank
17:0614
Chautauqua movement
15:0788
Chicago, Illinois
Communist activities 18: 0182
Yugoslavian consulate 23: 0104
Child labor amendment
U.S. Constitution 8: 0810
Childs, Morris
13: 0202
ChUe
Communist activities 3: 0623; 4: 0872; 18: 0170
Soviet agents 21:0420
see also Latin America
China
Communist activities 3: 0296; 6: 0604; 8: 0608;
10: 0360; 19: 0090; 25: 0607
Japanese activities 22: 0387
Kuomintang 21: 0506
nationalist movement 21: 0386
Christians, George W.
22: 0044, 0168
Christian Social Justice Fund
17: 0277
Cibrario, Jacques Roberto
20: 0243
Cigarmaker's International Union
8: 0001; 24: 0810
Citizen's Emergency League
23: 0109
Citizenship matters
U.S. 20:0258
see also Deportations; Naturalizations; Passport
matters
Citizens Law and Order League of Milwaukee,
Wisconsin
24:0586
Citizens League of Monette, Arkansas
15: 0806
Citizens National Committee for Sacco and Vanzetti
17: 0001,0277
Civilian Conservation Corps
Communist activities among workers 22: 0477,
0483
Civil Rights Federation of Detroit, Michigan
13:0069
Coles, L. F.
24:0188
Colombia
Communist activities 24: 0101
Colonization
Jews in Soviet Russia 4: 1023; 5: 0001; 22: 0339
Colorado
general 13: 0561
Colyer, William Thomas
17: 0571; 25: 0297; 26: 0466; 27: 0001,0334
Comintern
antiwar policies 3:0623
appeal against Fascism 6: 0290
Caribbean Bureau 22:0546
factionalism and internal politics 18: 0774
financial matters 20: 0001
57
Comintern cont.
First Congress 15: 0603
general 3: 0386; 4: 0658; 5: 0001,0215,0443,
0871; 6: 0001, 0775, 0945; 7: 0001, 0136, 0958;
8: 0208,1017; 9: 0370; 11: 0519; 12: 0001;
13: 0001, 0069; 14: 0212,0694,0959; 15: 0924,
0936; 16: 0001; 17: 0571, 0628,0769; 18: 0189,
0208, 0437, 0473,0691, 0804; 19: 0192, 0214,
0800; 20: 0001, 0288, 0335,0402, 0422, 0613;
21: 0001; 22: 0558, 1041; 23: 0014, 0080, 0182;
24: 0168, 0707, 0881;25: 0023, 0731,0799,
0862; 26: 0466; 27: 0001, 0838
Second Congress 2: 0832; 20: 0422
Seventh Congress 24: 0001, 0737, 0795
Third Congress 18: 0473
youth 20: 0001
see also Anti-Communist; Communist
Commercial relations
Soviet Russia 1:0815
Committee for Industrial Organization
11:0001,0195,0356
Committee for Protection of Foreign Born
24: 0435
see also National Committee for Protection of
Foreign Bom
Committee of Distinguished Members of the
American Bar
report of 2: 0216; 14: 0001 ; 27: 0001
Commonwealth College
3: 0001,0296; 4: 0001; 8: 0810; 11: 0195; 23: 0201
El Communista
22: 0546
Communist activities
Argentina 3: 0880; 4: 0257; 5: 0871; 18: 0176
Australia 3: 0623; 4: 0448
Austria 3:0880
Belgium 6: 0290; 18: 0832
Brazil 18: 0761
Canada 4: 0658; 9: 0601; 12: 0457; 20: 0001,
0375; 22: 0421; 23: 0080
Central America 6: 0290
Ceylon 23: 1039
ChUe 3: 0623; 4: 0872; 18: 0170
China 3: 0296; 6: 0604; 8: 0608; 10: 0360;
19:0090; 25:0607
Colombia 24: 0101
Costa Rica 4: 0448
Cuba 3: 0623; 6: 0775; 18: 0437; 22: 0558;
23: 0014; 24: 0705; 27: 0680
Czechoslovakia 5: 0443, 0871
Ecuador 3: 0623, 0880; 24: 0881
El Salvador 21: 0836
Finland 3: 0001,0386; 5: 0871; 7: 0958;
18: 0832; 20: 0223
France 3: 0001; 18: 0189; 20: 0833; 21: 0480
Germany 3: 0001, 0880; 4: 0001,0658; 5: 0443;
18: 0473, 0681, 0832; 20: 0001; 24: 0188;
25: 0466
Great Britain 4: 0257,0448; 5: 0001; 14: 0959;
17:0769; 18:0001
Greece 3: 0517; 4:0658
. Guatemala 5:0215,0443; 21: 0485
Haiti 6:0001
Honduras 5: 0001,0443; 22: 0546
Hungary 6: 0290; 20: 0869
Ireland 6: 0001; 19: 0169
Japan 6: 0604; 8: 0608
Latin America 19: 0214; 24: 0001
Latvia 4: 0658; 6: 0001, 0775
Lithuania 5: 0638; 6: 0001, 0604
Mexico 3: 0386; 8: 0208; 14: 0959; 20: 0399;
21:0001, 0445; 24: 0564, 0774, 0881;
25:0731
the Netherland East Indies 21: 0392
the Netherlands 3:0001, 0880; 5: 0443; 6: 0604
Norway 3: 0001; 18: 0208, 0401
PanamaS: 0001; 21: 0018
Paraguay 3:0623; 18: 0832
Peru 4: 0872
the Philippines 5: 0001, 0871; 6: 0001; 7: 0958
Poland 4: 0658; 5: 0443; 6: 0290; 20: 0001
Puerto Rico 19: 0192
San Salvador 3: 0001
South America 6: 0290
Soviet Russia 3: 0001, 0296, 0880
Spain 4: 0448; 6: 0001,0290
Sweden 5: 0638; 6: 0290; 10: 0360; 19: 0422
Uruguay 5: 0001, 0871
Venezuela 25: 0731
see also Anti-Communist; Comintern; International
Communist Women's Day; Profintem;
Publications; United Communist Party of
America; Workers (Communist) Party of
America; Young Communist League
Communist Labor Party of America
general 13: 0567, 0652, 0825; 14: 0212,0694;
15: 0603; 26: 0185, 0466; 27: 0001, 0334, 0536,
0621,0736, 0838; 28: 0030,0140
indictment of secretary of 18: 0911
internal organization 13: 0519
Communist Labour party
Great Britain 17: 0769
Communist Party of America
Bridgman convention 20: 0434, 0589, 0613
election campaigns 24: 0230
general 13: 0652, 0708, 0825; 14: 0001,0212,
0694; 15: 0603, 0861; 16: 0001; 17: 0537, 0571,
0680; 18: 0874, 0958; 19: 0171, 0211, 0214;
20: 0869, 0942, 0968; 24: 0188, 0844; 25: 0297;
26: 0185, 0466; 27: 0001, 0334,0482, 0536,
0787; 28: 0001,0140, 0649
internal organization 25: 0449
publications 25: 0297
Communist Party of Puerto Rico
election campaigns 19: 0192
Conference on Labor and the World Crisis
27: 0715
58
Connecticut
general 13: 0567; 24: 0805
Continental Congress of Workers and Fanners
6:0604
Cook, Dana
20:0395
Cooperative movement
5: 0443; 6: 0290; 8: 0001, 0208; 10: 0533;
17: 0769; 18: 0001; 21:0461
see also Mutual aid associations
Costa Rica
anti-Communist laws 4: 0448, 0658
Communist activities 4: 0448
Coughlin, Charles E.
8: 0608,1017; 9: 0001; 13: 0202; 23: 0788;
23:1023
Council of Working Class Women
5:0215
Couper, Jouda L.
20: 0894
CPUSA
Agitation-Propaganda Department 24: 0490
conventions 8: 0001; 9: 0001; 12: 0001
election campaigns 3: 0623; 4: 0448; 5: 0443, 0638,
0871; 7: 0001, 0136; 8: 0001, 0208, 0389;
10: 0360; 11:0001; 12:0307; 22:0558,0726,
0735;24:0511
factionalism 23: 0850
financial matters 24: 0774
fund-raising 12: 0307
general 3: 0386; 6: 0775; 18: 0001,0425; 21: 0852;
22:0387; 23: 0583, 0788, 1073; 24: 0001, 0101;
25: 0023
indictment of officials 22: 0735,0894,1041;
23: 0132
internal oiganization 6: 0001, 0290; 7: 0136;
8: 1017; 12: 0307; 13: 0001; 24: 0511, 0707,
0795
mass meetings 19: 0192
membership statistics 6: 0001; 11: 0907; 12: 0001
organization CCC workers 22: 0483
publications 3: 0001, 02%; 8: 1017; 22: 0558,
0735; 23: 0182; 24: 0490
Creo, Angelo
15:0797
Creque, Fred
21:0461
Criminal syndicalism
general 21: 0934
see also State legislation
Croatians
Croatian Fraternal Union of America 21: 0142
immigrants 8: 0389, 0608; 20: 0942; 21: 0142
nationalists 8:0389,0608
Crouch, Paul
8:0001; 21:0461
Crusaders for Economic Liberty
22:0044,0168
Crusader White Shirts
22:0044,0168
Csaktornyai, Stephen
20: 0303
Cuba
anti-Communist activities 22: 0558
anti-Communist laws 18: 0437
consulate•New York City 23: 0014
divorce laws 3: 0823
union oiganization 23: 0014
see also Communist activities
Cummings, Homer S.
15:0001
Cuomo, Taddeo
20:0589
Czechoslovakia
anti-Communist laws 17:0758
Communist activities 5: 0443, 0871
The Daily Worker
21: 0027,0097; 23: 0182
Damon, Anna
5: 0215; 9: 0001
Davidson, Joe
18:0473
Davison, E. C.
13:0825
Debs, Eugene V.
1: 0056; 13: 0708; 27: 0838; 28: 0387, 0606,0849
Debs, Katherine
28:0606
De-Linde
20:0946
Demonstrations
May Day 5: 0443
Dennis, Eugene
23: 0850
Deportations
Argentina 5: 0215; 6: 0290
Canada 21: 0594
Japan 21: 0594
Mexico 21: 0001
United States 1: 0452, 0815,1069, 1142; 2: 0216,
0464, 0472, 0666,0832; 3: 0623,0880; 4: 0872;
5:0001; 8: 0208,0389,0608,0810,1017;
9: 0148,0601; 11: 0718; 12: 0457, 0607, 0745,
0987; 13: 0202, 0561,0648, 0652, 0708, 0772,
0785,0825, 0856,0920; 14: 0001, 0646, 0664,
0694,0862,0904,0927, 0948; 15: 0001,0365,
0380,0413,0590, 0597, 0603, 0777, 0793,
0817, 0858, 0861,0875, 0916; 17: 0277, 0440,
0571,0680; 18: 0982; 19: 0001, 0066; 20: 0250,
0253, 0300, 0463,0840; 21: 0438, 0594;
23:1039; 24:0101, 0705, 0805, 0810, 0831;
25:0001, 0029, 0297, 0305; 26: 0001, 0170,
0183, 0185, 0466; 27: 0001,0334, 0482, 0536,
0621,0777, 0787
DeSUver, Albert
15: 0768; 25: 0305; 28: 0030
59
Detroit, Michigan
Civil Rights Federation of Detroit 13:0069
U.S. Department of Justice raids 15: 0777
Devbeak, Steve
15: 0822
Dimitroff, George
10: 0165; 24: 0795
Dinsmore, Herman
23: 1066
Diplomatic relations
Canada•USSR 21: 0386
Finland•Soviet Russia 18: 0473
Finland•USSR 23: 0059
Germany•Soviet Russia 18: 0473; 25: 0466
Great Britain•USSR 21: 0386, 0424
the Netherlands•USSR 19: 0422
Persia•Soviet Russia 17: 0769
Soviet Russia•general 14: 0212; 19: 0214;
20: 0335
United States
Nicaragua 21: 0428
Soviet Russia 18: 0802; 20: 0281, 0335;
24: 0847
USSR 6: 0775,0945; 7: 0001, 0136; 18: 0802;
23: 0250
USSR•general 19: 0422, 0800;
20:0001
see also Foreign agents
Discrimination
see Race relations
District of Columbia
anti-Communist laws 10: 0533
Farmers March on Washington, D.C. 22: 0015
Divorce laws
Cuba 3: 0623
Djamaroff, George
24:0310
Dominican Republic
anti-Communist laws 11: 0001
foreign agents 20: 0613
Donovan, William J.
17: 0680; 19: 0001; 21: 0001, 0175
Dozenburg, N.
20: 0948
Drake, Charles F.
21:0175
Drucker, David
13: 0202
Dubinsky, David
16:0044
Dunn, Robert W.
5:0001
Dunn, William F.
25: 0799
Dwyer, Francis
18:0832
Dzant, Joe
19:0066
Easley, Ralph M.
6:0001,0775; 7: 0001; 14: 0001; 15: 0001;
17:0680; 18: 0700; 21: 0024, 0175, 0594, 0673;
22: 0558; 25: 0001, 0198; 27: 0536; 28: 0649
Eberhardt, Jacob
18:0977
Economics
conditions•Austria 5: 0215
conditions•Soviet Russia 19: 0214,0422, 0800;
20: 0001, 0274, 0281,0288,0335
development•USSR 5: 0215; 19: 0422, 0800;
20: 0001; 21: 0175, 0386, 0424
financial markets•U.S. 13: 0950; 21: 0820;
22:0346, 0369
see also Unemployment
Ecuador
Communist activities 3: 0623, 0880; 24: 0881
Eddy, Jonathan
23:1066
Education
Brookwood Labor College 14: 0212; 16: 0453;
17: 0001,0277, 0680
Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers
16:0044
Commonwealth College 3: 0001,0296; 4: 0001;
8: 0810; 11: 0195; 23: 0201
Farmers National Educational Association 9: 0601
Massachusetts•Communist schools 25: 0785
Massachusetts Committee on Military Training in
Schools and Colleges 21: 0333
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 20: 0323
Mexico 20: 0399
programs 4: 0658; 20: 0323; 21: 0339
Rand School of Social Science 27: 0787, 0838
Sacramento, California, Workers School 23: 0169
Student Volunteer Convention 21:0117
summer camps 21: 0679; 22: 0492; 25: 0608
United Farmers' Educational League 21: 0284
United States 5: 0638
Valparaiso University 18: 0770
West Chester, Pennsylvania, State Normal School
21:0355
Workers' Educational Training Center 18: 0425
Works Progress Administration student aid 23: 0201
Young Communist League 20: 0323
Young Communist Training School 25: 0785
Young Men's Christian Association 20: 0323
Egypt
relations with USSR 6: 0290
Elections
boycott of 26: 0185
Communist Party of America campaigns 24: 0230
Communist Party of Puerto Rico campaigns
19:0192
Socialist Party of America campaigns
24:0840; 27: 0736
USSR 19: 0800
Workers (Communist) Party of America campaigns
21:0001,0097
60
El Salvador
anti-Communist laws 5: 0638
Communist activities 21: 0836
Emergency Committee for Southern Political
Prisoners
3:0623
Emigrants
to Soviet Russia 1: 0452,0724; 3: 0001; 27: 0334
to USSR 6: 0001
Engdahl, J. Louis
5: 0871; 13: 0717; 25: 0799
Epperson, Jack
15: 0882
Espionage
Espionage Act prosecutions 17:0680; 26:0185;
27: 0736; 28: 0030, 0140, 0167,0387,0606,
0636, 0649,0849
German Military Information Bureau in New York
22: 0028
Soviet Russia 21: 0775,0910,0934; 22: 0285
USSR 23: 0059
Estonia
anti-Communist laws 3: 0880; 10: 0533; 17: 0758
Ethiopia
Fascist activities 9: 0835
Europe
Congress of European Bolshevist Leaders 18: 0473
Eastern•Bolshevist activities 18: 0001
Foreign Labor Relief Committee 20:0274
International Socialist Conference 18: 0885
European Anti-Fascist Congress
6:0604
Famines
see Economics
Farley, Frank
9: 0370; 24: 0707
Farmer-Labor party
15: 0232, 0916, 0936; 17: 0001
Farm Research, Inc.
22:0015
Farmers holiday movement
7: 0385; 22: 0001,0015; 24: 0461
Fanners March on Washington, D.C.
22: 0015
Farmers National Committee for Action
6: 0604; 10: 0001; 22: 0015
Farmers National Educational Association
9: 0601
Farrington, Frank
13: 0652
Fascist activities
Ethiopia 9: 0835
Germany 3:0517,0623; 5: 0443,0638,0871;
6: 0775; 10:0165; 19: 0800
Italy 5: 0215; 6: 0604; 9:0835; 19:0800;
21:0284
Japan 19: 0800
United States 3: 0623; 5:0001; 6: 0290,0775,
0945; 7:0001, 0136,0385, 0781,0958;
8:0001,0208,0389,0588,0608,0810,1017;
9: 0601,0835; 10: 0001, 0360, 0732;
11: 0001, 0195, 0356, 0519,0718, 0907;
12:0001,0102,0307, 0457,0854; 13: 0001,
0069,0202; 15: 0924; 20: 0968; 22: 0044,
0168,0389; 23: 0250,0544,0788, 0850;
24:0435, 0774, 0786
see also Anti-Fascist
Fast, Howard
23:0850
Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America
18: 0167; 25: 0454
Federal Emergency Relief Administration
workers 7: 0525; 8: 0001
Federal employees
Communist activities 23: 0232,0238
Federal labor unions
15:0232
Federation of Liberal Precinct Clubs of America
4: 1023
Federation of Unions of Russian Workers
14:0001
see also Union of Russian Workers
Felicani, Aldino
16:0044
The Fellowship of Reconciliation
21:0111
The Fellowship of Youth for Peace
21:0111,0117,0120
Ferguson, Isaac E.
20: 0859; 27:0001; 28:0649
Filipinos
discrimination•U.S. 8:0389
Fina, Donald P.
6:0290
Financial matters
Comintern 20: 0001
CPUSA 12: 0307; 24: 0774
criticism•U.S. 13: 0950
fund-raising 12: 0207
general 2:0666; 3: 0386
AfewMas«!5 23:0850
Russian Soviet Government Bureau 1: 0001
see abo Economics
Finland
anti-Communist activities 5:0871
anti-Communist laws 6: 0290; 20: 0223; 21: 0594
Communist activities 3: 0001, 0386; 5: 0871;
18: 0832; 20: 0223
diplomatic relations•Soviet Russia 18: 0473
diplomatic relations•USSR 23: 0059
immigrants to United States 5: 0871; 22: 0485,
0492; 25:0619,0634
prohibition laws 3: 0623
Finnish Socialist Federation
25:0634
First Congress
Comintern 15:0603
61
Fishery and Cannery Workers Union
21:0453
Fitzpatrick, John
9: 0835
Fljozdal, Fred H.
3: 0386
Florida
general 13: 0609; 24: 0810
Flynn, Elizabeth Gurley
5: 0001; 12: 0854; 14: 0212; 25: 0305; 27: 0715
Ford, James W.
11:0519
Ford Motor Co
22:0377
Foreign agents
Bolshevist agente 17: 0607; 20: 0599, 0828, 0882
registration of 13: 0202; 20: 0613; 23: 0250, 0544,
0850;25:0818
Soviet Russian 20: 0243; 22: 0408, 0420,0441,
0775, 0934; 25: 0731, 0868
USSR 23: 0059; 24: 0586,0707, 0729
Foreign Labor Relief Committee
20: 0274
Focine, Torquato
15: 0800
Foster, William Z.
3: 0386; 5: 0443; 7: 0001 ; 14: 0212, 0617; 19: 0090,
0214; 20: 0388, 0431, 0613,0948; 22: 0558;
23: 0850; 24: 0490, 0795; 25: 0799,0818;
26: 0154
Fourth Congress
Second International 5: 0215
Socialist Workmen's International 4: 0448
Fraina, Louis C.
14: 0927; 15: 0603; 26: 0466; 27: 0001
France
anti-Communist laws 6: 0290; 20: 0833
Communist activities 3: 0001; 18: 0189; 20: 0833
France, Royal
17: 0749
Frankensteen, Richard T.
24: 0764
Frankfurter, Felix
27: 0001
Freeman, Joseph
23: 0850
Free Society
18:0414
Free speech issues
20: 0894; 21: 0355; 28: 0030, 0140, 0167, 0387,
0606, 0636, 0849, 0896
French, Herbert
23: 1066
Friends of the Soviet Union
4: 0658; 6: 0001 ; 8: 0208, 0810; 9: 0001; 10: 0001;
12: 0307; 13: 0519; 18: 0700, 0758; 19: 0422;
21: 0175; 23: 0150, 0250; 24: 0663, 0732, 0741;
27: 0838; 28: 0649
Fries, Amos A.
24: 0466
Fund-ratàng
CPUSA 12: 0307
Furmas, Paul J.
28: 0167
Fur Workers Industrial Union
8:0608
GaUiani, Lulgl
3:0296
Gannett, Lewis S.
17:0680
Garvey, Marcus
14: 0212
General strikes
general 3: 0517; 15: 0232; 18: 0170; 21: 0001;
23:0115
plans 1: 0056
see also Strikes
Georgia
general 13: 0627
Gerard, Joseph
21: 0788
Gerlipp, Clarence H.
20: 0463
Germany
activities in Africa 8: 0389
anti-Communist activities 4: 0872; 19: 0422;
20: 0384
anti-Communist laws 6: 0604
anti-Fascist activities 5: 0215
Congress of European Bolshevist Leaders 18: 0473
diplomatic relations•Soviet Russia 18: 0473;
25: 0466
"German-American Bund 23: 0250; 24: 0774
industrial interests 18: 0473
Military Information Bureau in New York 22: 0028
pro-German activities•U.S. 22: 0289, 0894
strikes 18: 0473
see also Communist; Fascist; Immigrants
Germer, Adolph
14:0212
Gerson, Simon
23: 0850
Gems, Longin F.
21:0386
Ghetto, Adam
21:0438
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins
28:0649
Gilman, Elizabeth
17: 0277
Giovanitti, Arturo
14: 0212
Gitlow, Benjamin
12:0854; 13:0001; 14:0212; 20: 0613,0859;
21: 0355; 24: 0101; 25: 0023, 0799; 27: 0532;
28: 0140
GodowskI, V.
15:0788
Gogan, Roy
23:0101
62
Gold, Ben
15:0913
Gold, Michael
5:0001
Goldman, Emma
14: 0001, 0694; 15: 0380; 17: 0616
Goldsmith, Leonard
23: 1066
Gomez, Juan Vicente
10:0533
Gompers, Samuel
13: 0561; 20: 0854
Gottfried, Morris
21: 0679
Grand Army of the Republic
22: 0410
Great Britain
anarchists 21: 0401
anti-Communist laws 5: 0001
diplomatic relations•USSR 21: 0386, 0424
immigrants to United States 21:0401, 0788
Independent Labour party 17: 0769; 18: 0001;
27: 0482
occupation of Baghdad 26: 0150
see also Communist activities
Greece
anti-Communist activities 4: 0658
Communist activities 3: 0517; 4: 0658
Green, John
8: 0001; 23: 0171
Groosenberg, Fannie
16: 0652
Grunzweig, John
19:0001
Guabello, Alberto
15: 0590
Guabello, Paul
15: 0590
Guatemala
anti-Communist activities 5: 0215
Communist activities 5: 0215, 0443; 21: 0485
see also Latin America
Gulick, Sidney L.
18:0167; 25:0454
Habeas corpus proceedings
15: 0413, 0603, 0861, 0875,0916; 17:0675;
18:0982; 19: 0001; 20: 0253; 25: 0029,0297;
26:0185, 0466; 27: 0001, 0334
Haiti
Communist activities 6: 0001
Hall, Adolphus
14: 0694
Hall, Edward
24: 0764
Halperin, Isaac
20: 0250
Hampel, Adam
20: 0828
Hand, Learned
17:0675
Hapgcod, Powers
8: 1017; 16: 0217
Hardy, George
18:0473, 0958
Harman, Gertrude C.
26:0170; 27: 0001
Marris, Lemuel
22:0015
Hathaway, Clarence A.
4: 0658; 15: 0913
Hawaii
Communist activities 21: 0738
Hawkes, Thomas
14:0927
Haymarket Square
martyrs 10: 0732
Hays, Arthur Garfield
16: 0453; 17: 0001, 0277; 25: 0209
Hays, Will H.
21:0175
Hays Bureau
4:0257
Haywood, Harry
6:0775
Haywood, William D.
13: 0652,0717; 14: 0212, 0617; 24: 0874; 28: 0387
Hearst, William Randolph
8: 1017; 9: 0001, 0370,0601, 0835; 10: 0533;
22: 0735
Hecker, Julius
15: 0886
Heller, Abram A.
1:0815; 14: 0001; 20: 0281
Henderson, Donald
8:0001
Herman, John Jr.
19:0151
Herndon, Angelo
7: 0385,0781, 0958; 8: 0608, 0810; 9: 0601;
10: 0165
Herring, Hubert C.
14:0959
Highlander Folk School
9:0001,0370
HIU, Arthur D.
17:0277
HiUquit, Morris
4: 0448; 28: 0167
Hinojoso, Roberto
21:0420
Holtzoff, Alexander
23:0178,0182
Honduras
anti-American activities 5: 0001
Communist activities 5: 0001, 0443
63
Hoover, J. Edgar
1: 1142; 2: 0464, 0666; 3: 0296; 4:1023; 5: 0201,
0443; 8: 0588; 10: 0001; 11: 0356; 14: 0617;
17: 0680; 18: 0758; 20: 0402; 21: 0001,0097,
0117, 0264, 0530,0673, 0691, 0703, 0775,
0801,0910,0934; 22: 0015,0028,0044,0168,
0333, 0369,0392,0483, 0492, 0726, 1040,
1041; 23: 0088, 0115, 0182,0238, 0544, 0581,
0850, 1066; 24: 0001-0756,0769-0881;
25: 0001-0868; 26: 0001, 0170, 0185,0466;
27: 0001, 0334, 0482, 0532,0536, 0621;
28: 0030, 0140,0165
Horthy, Miklós von Nagybánya
18:0804
Hourwich, Isaac A.
14:0212
Hughes, Längsten
21:0175
Hungary
anti-Communist laws 11: 0907; 18: 0473
Communist activities 6: 0290; 20: 0869; 21: 0934
consulates•U.S. 23: 0084, 0088; 24: 0469
Hungarian petition 14: 0862
immigrants to United States 3: 0880; 18: 0804;
21:0930
Hunter, Edward H.
24: 0786
Ibanez, Blasco
15:0858
Idaho
general 13: 0648
state legislation 14: 0927
ILD
3: 0517,0623; 4: 0257, 0448, 0872, 1023; 5: 0001,
0638, 0871; 6: 0290; 7: 0001, 0136, 0385, 0525,
0781, 0958; 8: 0208, 0389, 0608,0810, 1017;
9: 0001, 0601; 10: 0001; 13: 0001,0069;
14: 0837, 0862; 16: 0044, 0217; 17: 0440;
19: 0057; 21: 0027, 0284; 22: 0387, 0558;
23: 0101, 0583, 1073; 24: 0267,0469, 0881;
25:0179,0218
Illinois
Communist activities 18: 0182
general 13: 0652; 24: 0829
Yugoslavian consulate 23: 0104
see also Haymarket Square
Immigrants
Armenian 22: 1074; 23: 0059
Croatian 8: 0389, 0608; 20: 0942; 21: 0142
Finnish 5: 0871; 22: 0485,0492; 25: 0619, 0634
general 18: 0804; 21: 0449; 24: 0435; 25: 0840
German 18: 0973, 0977; 20: 0840, 0882
Great Britain 21: 0401, 0788
Hungarian 3: 0880; 18: 0804; 21: 0934
Italian 20: 0255, 0558; 21: 0697, 0703, 0726, 0823;
25:0783,0857
Japanese 5: 0201; 10: 0533; 14: 0212; 21: 0738;
23: 0146
Lebanese 18: 0882
PoUsh 23:0001
Russian 1: 0066,0452, 0724; 2: 0472; 3: 0517,
0623,0880; 4: 0001, 1023; 5: 0001, 0443,0638;
6: 0001,0604; 13: 0519, 0567, 0785; 14: 0001,
0212; 15: 0375,0380, 0603,0793, 0822;
19:0051; 20:0840; 22:0392; 23: 0250;
24: 0001, 0310, 0586, 0663,0701; 27: 0668;
28: 0140, 0649
Serbian 18: 0187; 20:0938
Syrian 18: 0882
Yugoslavian 23: 0104; 25: 0460
see also Deportations; Emigrants; Naturalizations
Independent Communist Labor League
23:1063
Independent Labour Party of Great Britain
17: 0769; 18: 0001; 27: 0482
India
anti-Communist laws 4: 0001
Indian National Congress 7: 0769
Indiana
Communist activities 21: 0541
general 13: 0708; 24: 0831
jailing of Communists 22: 0558, 0735
Valparaiso University 18: 0770
Industrial unionism
United States 7: 0958; 15: 0232; 20: 0388
Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding
Workers of America
23:0171
The Industrial Worker
27: 0777
Industry
Germany 18: 0473
Inunctions
use in labor disputes 21: 0097; 25: 0715
Insanity
16:0024; 20: 0463
Intercollegiate Socialist Society
27: 0703, 0715
Internal Revenue Service
investigations 13: 0202
International Anarchist Group
25: 0054
International Association of Bridge and Structural
Iron Workers
24: 0230
International Association of Machinists
13: 0825; 20: 0948; 24: 0230; 26: 0466
International Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators,
and Paperhangers of America
6:0775
International Communist Women's Day
5:0443
International Council of Trades and Industrial
Unions
18:0691
International Entente Against the Third
International
3: 0001,0517; 5: 0215; 20: 0001; 21: 0027
64
International Federation of Trade Unions
21:0453
International Fellowship of Reconciliation
4:0001
International Ladies Garment Workers Union
8: 0208; 14: 0212
International Red Aid
3: 0001; 4: 0872; 5: 0443; 6: 0775; 8: 0208;
14: 0959; 19: 0422; 21: 0594
International Typographical Union of North America
8:0001
International Union of Food and Drink Workers
3:0001
International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter
Workers
12: 0745; 13: 0561; 15: 0778
International World Workers
18:0170
Inter-Parliamentary Union Conference
21:0024
Iowa
general 13: 0717; 24: 0840
Ireland
anti-Communist laws 4: 0658,0872,1023
Communist activities 6: 0001; 19: 0169
Irish Transport Workers Union 27: 0482
Italy
anarchist activities 20: 0455; 21: 0697, 0703;
25: 0783
anti-Fascist activities 3: 0880
Fascist activities 5:0215; 6: 0604; 9: 0835;
19: 0800; 21: 0284
laws 3: 0623
see also Immigrants
IWO
7: 0525,0958; 9: 0001; 11: 0001,0519, 0718;
23:0250,1073; 24: 0741
IWW
1: 0815; 2: 0001, 0216,0464, 0472,0666; 3: 0001,
0296; 13: 0511, 0519, 0561,0609, 0652, 0717,
0772, 0825, 0856,0870, 0896,0900, 0920,
0950; 14: 0212,0617,0646, 0694, 0830,0837,
0877, 0904, 0923, 0948, 0959; 15: 0001, 0413,
0603, 0797, 0806,0822,0875, 0889; 16: 0001;
17: 0680; 18: 0170, 0473,0691, 0788,0800,
0958; 20: 0375,0460, 0894; 21: 0552; 24: 0453,
0874,0878; 25: 0001, 0305; 26: 0466; 27: 0334,
0838; 28: 0387,0606, 0636
Jackson, Gardner
17:0440
Jackson, John
15: 0413,0916; 25: 0029
Jakira, Abraham
14: 0212; 18: 0911
Janeo, Maier
18:0176
Japan
anti-Communist laws 21: 0594
Communist activities 6:0604; 8:0608
deportations 21: 0594
Fascist activities 19: 0800
Japanese activities 14: 0212; 15: 0889; 22: 0387;
23:0250, 0581; 25: 0464
see also Immigrants
Japanese-Americans
Communist activities among 5: 0201; 21: 0738;
23:0146
discrimination against 10: 0533
immigrants 14: 0212
Jelovich, Mijo
20:0609
Jerome, V. J.
23:0850
Jewish Federation of the American Labor Alliance
18:0964
Jews
All Russian Jewish Public Committee 27:0668
colonization in Soviet Russia 4: 1023; 5: 0001 ;
21:0339
see also Anti-Semitism
Joffe, A. A.
18:0473
Johnson, Jack
6: 0775
Johnson, James Weldon
14:0212; 16:0217, 0657
Johnstone, Jack
13:0202
Jung, H. A.
21:0793, 0801
Jungworth, Otto C.
23:0150
Kahn, Samuel
14:0956
Kaltenborn, Hanes
20:0857
Kane, Francis Fisher
16:0453; 17:0001, 0277; 25: 0209
Kansas
deportations 26: 0170
general 13: 0752
German immigrants 20: 0840
Russian immigrants 20: 0840
Kansas City, Kansas
deportation of Communists 26: 0170
Karolyi, Michael
18:0804
Kassay, Paul
21:0930,0934
Katzeff, Morris
17:0571
Kazinln, Isaac
20:0599
Kelley, Florence
8: 0810; 15: 0657; 25: 0305
Kellogg, Paul U.
16:0657
65
Kent, Rockwell
16: 0657; 17: 0277
Kentucky
general 13: 0763
Keracher, John
9: 0148
Kester, Howard
17:0001
Keynes, John Maynard
18: 0894
Kilbreth, Mary G.
20: 0613
King, Cameron
17:0001
King, Judson
20: 0936
Koch, Lucien
23: 0201
Konikov, William Morris
17: 0607
Korea
Japanese activities 25: 0464
Krivltsky, Walter G.
13:0001
Kropotkin, Peter
18:0414
Krumbein, Charles
23: 0132
Krutch, Joseph Wood
16: 0657; 17: 0277
Krzycki, Leo
14: 0212
Kuhn, Fritz
24: 0774
Ku Klux Klan
20: 0968; 22: 0044, 0168; 23: 0788
Kun, Bela
20: 0001, 0859
Kuntz, Charles
4: 1023
Kuomintang
21:0506
Labor
Conference on Labor and the World Crisis 27: 0715
disputes 3: 0386; 21: 0097, 0688; 24: 0810;
25: 0715
Farmer-Labor party 10:0165
Independent Communist Labor League 23: 1063
legislation•Brazil 18: 0761
problems
Mexico 5: 0443; 21: 0001; 24: 0881
Spain 4: 0448
Trinidad 11: 0519
Westlndies8:0148
see also Union organization
Labor Day
9: 0835
Labor party
16: 0217; 18: 0208
Ladles Auxiliary of the Grand Army of the Republic
22: 0410
LaFollette, Robert M. Jr.
16: 0044, 0217, 0453; 17: 0566
La Guardia, Fiorello H.
16: 0453
Laidler, Harry
4:0448
Larkin, James
1: 0056; 20: 0859; 27: 0482,0532; 28: 0140
Lasser, David
19: 0057
Lathrop, Julia C.
16: 0217, 0657
Latin America
Caribbean Bureau of the Comintern 22: 0546
Communist activities 19: 0214; 21: 0836; 24: 0001
Latin American Nationalist League 21: 0480,0485
see also entries under individual countries
Latvia
anti-Communist activities 5: 0001, 0443, 0871;
18: 0774
anti-Communist laws 15: 0786
Communist activities 4: 0658
publications 6: 0775
Laws and legislation
Argentinas: 0871; 6: 0290; 12:0745
Australia 3: 0880
Austria 20:0869
Brazil 18: 0437, 0761
Canada 4: 0872; 5: 0001,0215, 0871; 21: 0594
Ceylon 11: 0519
Costa Rica 4: 0448, 0658
Cuba 3: 0623; 18: 0437
El Salvador 5: 0638
Estonia 3: 0880; 10: 0533
Finland 3: 0623; 6: 0290; 20: 0223; 21: 0594
France 20: 0833
Germany 6:0604
Great Britain 5: 0001
Hungary 11: 0907; 18: 0473
Ireland 4: 0658, 0872,1023
Italy 3: 0623
Japan 21: 0594
Lithuania 3: 0880
Luxembourg 5: 0001
Mexico 14: 0959; 21:0001
the Netherlands 2: 0832
Persia 4:0257
Peru 11:0356
the Philippines 5: 0871
Poland 6: 0945; 7: 0958; 12: 0745
South Africa 2: 0001
Soviet Russia 18: 0473; 19: 0214
Switzerland 12: 0102
Trinidad 5: 0871
USSR 10: 0533; 19: 0422; 20: 0001
Venezuela 10: 0533
Westlndiesl0:0533
see also State legislation; U.S. Congress
66
Lawyers
see Committee of Distinguished Members of the
American Bar
Leach, Agnes Brown
25:0305
League for Industrial Democracy
8: 1017; 9: 0148
League of Women Voters
13: 0519
League Opposed to Imperialism
18: 0437
Leavenworth Penitentiary
14: 0923
Lebanon
immigrants•U.S. 18: 0882
Lee, Algernon
4:0448;28:0167
Left Wing Conference of the Socialist Party of
America
27: 0482, 0532
Legal defense
efforts 25: 0305; 27: 0001,0334; 28: 0030, 0167,
0387,0649, 0849
see also Habeas corpus proceedings
Leion, I. H.
15: 0375
Lenin, V. I.
18: 0691; 25: 0466; 28: 0001
Lewis, John L.
11:0001,0195
Liberal Club of the West Chester, Pennsylvania,
State Normal School
21:0355
Libraries
Library of Congress 17: 0626
public 13: 0920; 19: 0038; 25: 0291
Lindgren, Edward I.
14: 0212; 18: 0911
Lippa, Constantin!
21:0688,0691
Lisbon, Portugal
car strike 18:0688
Lithuania
anti-Communist laws 3: 0880
Communist activities 5: 0638; 6: 0001, 0604
Litvinov, Maxim
18: 0802
Living conditions
USSR 6: 0001
Local unions
Ohio 21: 0433
see also Union organization
Lockouts
18:0170
Logan Act
registration of foreign agents 20: 0613; 25: 0818
Lojan, Michael
20: 0253
Londrigan, Joseph
20:0826
London, England
London Association for Protection of Trade 21: 0424
see also Great Britain
Lone, Ricardo
21:0703
Lone, Rudolph
21: 0703
Long, Huey P.
7: 0136
Los Angeles, California
Communist activities 23: 0115
Lovett, Robert Morss
9:0148; 21:0355
Lovestone, Jay
20:0613,0948; 24: 0101; 25: 0799; 28: 0649
Lubln, Simon J.
7:0385
Ludendorff, Erich Friedrich Wilhelm
3: 0517; 24: 0101
Lumber Workers' International Union of Canada
20: 0375
Luxembourg
anti-Communist laws 5: 0001
Lynch, Lillian
4:0872
McFarland, Charles S.
25: 0454
Machado, Eduardo
21:0485
Mack, Frank
17:0571; 25: 0297
McKay, Claude
14:0212
McKenny, Ruth
23:0850
Maguí, A. B.
23:0850
Maine
general 13: 0766
Manning, Frank J.
23: 0127
Marcantonio, Vito
13:0069;22:0558
Marine Transport Workers Union
19: 0149
Marine Workers Industrial Union
8: 0208,1017; 24: 0707
Markovlch, Spasoje
20: 0460
Marsh, Benjamin C.
8: 0810,1017; 13: 0519; 16: 0217; 18: 0405
UMarUUo
21:0823
Martens, Ludwig C. A. K.
1: 0001,0028, 0815,1069, 1142; 13: 0652;
14: 0001, 0212, 0694; 15: 0380, 0603; 18: 0802;
26: 0185,0466; 27: 0621; 28: 0649
67
Marti, Jose
10: 0732
"A Martyr of the People"
20: 0582
Maryland
general 13: 0772; 14: 0638
Soviet arsenal•alleged 21: 0673
Massachusetts
Communist activities 24: 0453
Communist schools 20: 0323; 25: 0785
general 13: 0785
IWW 24: 0453
Sacco-Vanzetti executions 16: 0044,0217, 0453;
17: 0001, 0277, 0440; 25: 0054, 0179
Massachusetts Committee on Military Training in
Schools and Colleges
21: 0333
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
20:0323
Mass meetings
GreatBritaml8:0001
Switzerland 17: 0674
United States 1: 0028; 2: 0001; 3: 0386-0880;
4: 0001,1023; 5: 0001,0215-0871; 6: 00010945; 7: 0001,0136,0385,0781; 8: 0001-0389;
9: 0370,0835; 10: 0001-0360; 11: 0001, 0356,
0519, 0907; 12: 0102,0854,0987; 13: 0069,
0609, 0627, 0652,0717, 0785,0870; 14: 0001,
0212, 0646; 15: 0889, 0908; 16: 0217,0657;
17: 0001,0440; 18: 0788, 0958,0964; 19: 0192;
20: 0894, 0948; 21: 0018, 0538, 0852; 22: 0015,
0333, 0377, 0558,0894; 23: 0221, 0850;
24: 0001, 0168,0197, 0230,0310, 0435, 0461,
0469; 25: 0043, 0054, 0179-0279, 0305, 0608,
0799; 26: 0466; 27: 0838; 28: 0387-0896
Matvin, John
21:0910
Maurer, James H.
14:0212
May Day
activities 3: 0517
demonstrations 5: 0443
general 7: 0385, 0525; 9: 0148, 0370; 11: 0356,
0907; 15: 0936; 20: 0948; 24: 0001,0511;
28: 0606
Idaho 14: 0927
Indiana 13: 0708
Massachusetts 13: 0785
Michigan 13: 0825; 18: 0901
New Hampshire 13: 0915
New York 14: 0001,0212
propaganda 18: 0874
slogans 6: 0290
Mazey, Emil
24: 0764
Membership statistics
CPUSA6:0001;11:0907; 12:0001
IWW 14: 0830
Socialist Party of America 14: 0877
Metal Workers Industrial League
8:0208
Methodist Episcopal Church
investigation of American Civil Liberties Union
17: 0680
Mexico
anti-Communist laws 14: 0959
deportations 21: 0001
foreign agents 20: 0613
labor problems 5: 0443; 24: 0881
nationalization of fiber production 11: 0519
propaganda 14: 0959; 24: 0881
publications 19: 0038
Soviet Russian agents 25: 0731
unemployment 5: 0443
U.S. Congress Subcommittee to Investigate
Mexican Affairs 14:0837
see also Communist activities
Michelson, Herman
23: 0788
Michigan
anti-Communist activities 25: 0619
Bridgman convention•Communist Party of
America 20: 0434, 0561,0613
Civil Rights Federation of Detroit 13: 0069
Communist activities 22: 0485,0492
general 13:0825
Russian tractor company recruitment 21: 0746
state anti-Communist laws 8: 0389; 20: 0434, 0589;
22: 0492
union organization 22: 0377; 24: 0764
United Communist Party of America 18: 0901
U.S. Department of Justice raids 15: 0777;
20: 0434, 0589, 0613
Military buildup
USSR 4: 0658
Military training
United States 21: 0333
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Citizens Law and Order League of Milwaukee
24: 0586
Miners union
local meeting 21: 043
Minneapolis, Minnesota
general 18: 0958
Minnesota
Communist Party of America 18: 0958
general 13: 0856
IWW 18: 0958
publications 20: 0882
Minor, Robert
5: 0638; 9: 0370; 14: 0212; 15: 0908; 20: 0613;
25: 0818; 27: 0838
M Ins, Leonard
27: 0838
Mlnton, Bruce
23: 0850
Minutes of meetings
American Civil Liberties Union executive
committee 25: 0305
68
National Fanners Union
4:0257
Nationalization
Mexico 11: 0519
National Miners Union
4: 0658,1023; 6: 0290; 8: 0208
National Park Service
summer employees 22: 0399
National Popular Government League
2: 0216; 20: 0936
National Recovery Administration
18:0425; 22: 0558,0726; 23: 0109; 24: 0461
The National Ripsaw
28:0606
National Shoe and Leather Workers' Union
6:0290
National Student League
6:0775
National Textile Workers Union
5: 0215; 8: 0208
National Unemployed Council
23:0165
National Unemployment League
20:0957
Naturalizations
United States 15:0793; 19: 0066; 20: 0460;
21:0162,0172, 0688,0691; 22: 0894; 23: 0345;
24:0841; 25:0039,0715
Nature Friends of America
8:0389
Nearlng, Scott
18: 0832
Nebraska
general 13: 0900; 24: 0841
Nelson, Walter M.
17: 0680
The Netherlands
anti-Communist laws 2: 0832; 5:0443
Anti-War Congress 5: 0638
Communist activities 3:0001,0880; 5: 0443;
6:0604
diplomatic relations•USSR 19: 0422
Netherlands East Indies
Communist activities 21: 0392
New Hampshire
general 13: 0915; 24: 0844
New Jersey
Communist activities 22:473; 23: 0127
general 13: 0920; 24: 0847
state legislation 25: 0715
U.S. army arsenals 22: 0028
New Masses
23:0788, 0850
New Mexico
general 13:0950
Newspapermen
U.S. Department of Justice investigations 23: 1066
New Ulm, Minnesota
Dakota Freie Presse 20: 0869
Mississippi
general 13: 0867
Missouri
general 13: 0870
St Louis convention•Socialist Party of America
28: 0167
state penitentiary prisoners 28: 0167, 0387,0606
Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad Company
bankruptcy 13:0631
Mitchell, H. L.
10:0360
Modern School Association of North America
2:0666
Montana
general 13: 0896
IWW membership•Butte 14: 0830
naturalizations 24: 0841
perjury•Helena 15: 0413,0916
Morrow, Francis A.
20:0859
Mortimer, Wlndham
24:0764
Moscow, USSR
arrest of missionary in 15: 0886
Motion pictures
celebrities 12:0457
censorship 21: 0175
general 4: 0257; 8: 1017; 13: 0069; 17: 0440;
20:0243, 0582; 21: 0175, 0264, 0445; 24: 0329
production 21: 0175, 0264
Moyer, Charles H.
13:0561
Muste, A. J.
16: 0453; 17:0001,0277, 0680
Mutual aid associations
21:0726
see also Cooperative movement
National Americanization Committee of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States
22:0552
National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People
14: 0212
National Civil Liberties Bureau
17: 0566; 28: 0030, 0167
see also American Civil Liberties Bureau
National Committee for Protection of Foreign Born
7:0781
see also Committee for Protection of Foreign Born
National Committee for the Defense of Political
Prisoners
5: 0001; 7: 0385
National Council of Action
17: 0769; 18:0001
National Council of Progressives
18:0894
National Croatian Society
20: 0942
69
New York
Anarchy Law prosecutions 27: 0482,0532
Chamber of Commerce 7: 0001
Civic Club of New York City 21: 0485
CPUSA conference 12: 0001
Cuban consulate 23: 0014
general 14: 0001, 0212, 0617
German Military Information Bureau 22: 0028
mass meetings 22: 0015
newspapermen 23: 1066
New York Public Library 25: 0291
radical activities 21: 0485
Socialist Party of New York 2: 0001
state legislation 27: 0482, 0532
state legislative investigations 12: 0001
U.S. army arsenals 22: 0028
see also Russian Soviet Government Bureau
The New Yorü Times
23:1066
Nicaragua
diplomatic relations•U.S. 21: 0428
see also Latin America
Nikolsky, B.
13: 0202
Nolan, Timothy F.
15: 0413,0916; 25: 0029
Non-Partisan League
15: 0916; 17: 0566; 28: 0387, 0606
Norrlss, H. C. R.
15: 0348
North Carolina
general 14:0629
North Dakota
general 14: 0638
Non-Partisan League 28: 0387
publications 18: 0977
Norway
anti-Communist laws 17: 0607
Bolshevist activities 18: 0208
Communist activities 3: 0001; 18: 0208,0401
Labor party 18:0208
Novo Russkoe Slovo
15: 0924
Nudelman, Harry
21: 0162, 0172
Nudelman, Jacob
21:0162
Nuorteva, Santeri
1: 0001,0815; 14: 0212, 0694; 15: 0603; 28: 0649
O'Hare, Kate Richards
14: 0212; 28: 0167, 0387, 0606
Ohio
anarchists 21: 0703
Communist Labor Party of Ohio 27: 0838
general 14: 0646; 24: 0874
publications 18: 0973
radical activities 20: 0879
strikes 21: 0433
Oklahoma
Communist activities 24: 0741
general 14: 0664; 24: 0878
IWW 18: 0800
race riots 19: 0171, 0211 ; 24: 0844
Olander, Victor
16:0044
Olgin, Moissaye J.
10: 0360; 12: 0001; 14: 0212; 21: 0284; 25: 0799;
27: 0680
O'Sullivan, Edmond
19: 0169
Owen, Chandler
14:0212;27:0715
Owens, Edgar
20:0613
Pacific Coast
Communist activities•Northwest 24: 0511
radical activities 15: 0889
Pacifism
see Antiwar
Padway, Joseph A.
26:0466
Panama
Communist activities 5: 0001 ; 21: 0018
radical publications 3: 0001
see also Latin America
Pan American Round Table
14:0959
Pankhurst, Sylvia
15: 0786
Parades, Eduardo
25:0041
Paraguay
Communist activities 3: 0623; 18: 0832
see aiso Latin America
Parker, Alton B.
17: 0628
Passport matters;
United States 13: 0419; 15: 0765; 18: 0804;
19: 0090; 22: 0735, 0894, 1040
Patterson, William L.
7: 0385,0525, 0781
Pearl, Jeanette D.
28:0849,08%
Pease, Frank
21:0175,0264
Pelley, William Dudley
7: 0136; 10: 0165,0732; 22:0044
Pennsylvania
Communist activities 24: 0756
general 14: 0694
Italian Sporting Club of Erie 21: 0726
refusal to allow mass meeting 23: 0221
United Anthracite Workers of Pennsylvania
8: 1017; 9: 0001
70
Porter, John
21:0538
Post, Louis F.
13: 0772,0856; 14: 0001, 0694; 15: 0413, 0793,
0861,0908; 16: 0657; 17: 0277; 25: 0039;
26: 0170; 27: 0334, 0536,0621, 0787
Prevey, Margaret
1:0056
Primo-Zanco, Eugenie de
21:0449
Prisoners
radical•censoring mail of 14: 0923
see also Herndon, Angelo; Political prisoners;
Sacco-Vanzetti case
Prisoners' Relief Fund of the ILD
5:0001
Private detectives
5: 0638; 14: 0694; 19: 0038; 21: 0552; 24: 0267;
26:0466
Profintern
anti-Fascist activities 6: 0604
executive bureau 3: 0296
general 3: 0001, 0386; 5: 0871; 8: 0608; 19: 0214;
20:0001, 0379, 0388; 21: 0594, 0836; 24: 0732
propaganda 20: 0449
Progressive Mine Workers of America
5: 0871; 6: 0945; 10: 0001
Progressives
National Council of Progressives 18: 0894
Prohibition
laws•Finland 3:0623
Proletarian Party of America
9: 0148; 14: 0212
Propaganda
El Salvador 21: 0836
Germany 18:0473,0681
Mexico 14: 0959; 24:0881
the Netherlands 6:0604
Profintern 20: 0449
Soviet Russia 18: 0761; 19: 0214, 0422, 0800;
20:0001; 21: 0399; 25: 0731
United States 1: 0001, 0815; 2: 0666; 3: 0517,
0623; 4:0001, 0872, 1023; 5: 0001, 0638;
6: 0604; 17: 0628; 18: 0473, 0874; 20: 0422,
0859, 0948; 21: 0399, 0751,0820; 22: 0346,
0387, 0399,0477,0526; 23: 0001; 24: 0490;
25: 0861
Protests
anti-Communist activities 21: 0848
Cuban consulates 23: 0014
deportations 26: 0466
Fascist activities 22: 0289; 23: 0104
Hemdon, Angelo•case 7: 0385, 0781, 0958;
8: 0609,0810; 9: 0601; 10: 0165
Hungarian consulates 23: 0084,0088
indictment of CPUSA officials 22: 0735,0894,
1041
intervention in Soviet Russia 20: 0281
Japanese activities in China 22: 0387
U.S. Department of Justice
agent 15: 0875; 25: 0041
investigations 20: 0402
raids 15:0854
West Chester State Normal School 21: 0355
"The People's Business"
18: 0894
People's Legislative Service
18: 0894
People's Reconstruction League
18: 0405
Perjury
deportation case•Helena, Montana 15:0413,0916
Pershing, George Orr
21:0461
Persia
anti-Communist laws 4: 0257
Peru
anti-Communist laws 11: 0356
Communist activities 4: 0872
Peterson, Arnold
2:0472
Petitions
Hungarian 14: 0862
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
U.S. Department of Justice agent 15:0875;
25:0041
The Philippines
anti-Communist laws 5: 0871
Communist activities 5:0001,0871; 6: 0001;
7:0958
Phoenix, Arizona
Trades Council 18: 0788
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
U.S. Department of Justice 20: 0402
Pokrovsky, Maria
21:0408
Pokrovsky, Viachislav
21:0408
Poland
anti-Communist activities 4:0658
anti-Communist laws 6: 0945; 7: 0958; 12: 0745
Communist activities 4: 0658; 5:0443; 6:0290;
20:0001
immigrants to United States 23:0001
occupation of Ukraine 20: 0266
Police
brutality 1:0815; 13: 0627
Political affairs
China 21: 0506
see also Diplomatic relations
Political prisoners
amnesty requests 25: 0305
National Committee for the Defense of Political
Prisoners 5: 0001; 7: 0385
United States 4: 0448
Popowetzsky, Jace
21:0522,0530
Portugal
strikes 18:0688
71
Protests cont
political prisoners in the United States 4: 0448
publications 23: 1023,1034
pro-German activities 22: 0289
refusal to allow mass meeting 23:0221
Sacco-Vanzetti case 16: 0044, 0217, 0453, 0657;
17: 0001, 0277, 0440; 25: 0054
Scottsboro Boys case 4: 0448,0658; 5: 0638, 0871;
6: 0290; 7: 0136, 0958; 8: 0208, 0389,0608;
14: 0862; 19: 0422
state criminal syndicalism laws 19: 0057
un-American activities 20:0306
U.S. Department of Justice investigations 13: 0202;
26: 0170, 0466; 27: 0001
Yugoslavian consulates 23: 0104
The Public
27: 0621
Publications
Brazil 18: 0761
Canada 22: 0421
Germany 18: 0473
Great Britain 17: 0769; 18: 0001; 19: 0214
Honduras 22: 0546
Latvia 6: 0775
Mexico 19: 0038
Norway 18: 0208
Panama 3: 0001
Soviet Russia 18: 0774; 25: 0291,0868
United States 3: 0001, 0296,0880; 4: 0001, 0257;
5: 0001,0215-0871; 6:0001-0945; 7:0001,
0781, 0958; 8: 0001, 0389, 0608-1017; 9: 0001,
0148, 0601, 0835; 10: 0001-0732; 11: 0001,
0356-0907; 12: 0001-0987; 13: 0001, 0202,
0419, 0652, 0825,0870, 0920; 14: 0904, 0927,
0959; 15: 0359, 0603, 0777,0825, 0875,0908,
0924; 16: 0001; 17: 0537, 0616, 0626, 0680,
0755; 18: 0001,0414,0683,0691-0758,0788,
0804, 0874, 0894,0901, 0911, 0973, 0977;
19:0038,0049,0090,0171,0211,0214;
20: 0001, 0255, 0263,0288, 0384, 0395,0422,
0613, 0857, 0882,0948, 0968; 21: 0097, 0284,
0348, 0411, 0428,0546, 0738,0852; 22: 0015,
0044, 0346, 0369, 0526, 0552-0735, 1064;
23: 0182, 0788-1034, 1066; 24: 0001-0168,
0197, 0278, 0345,0466, 0511, 0622,0663,
0707,0795, 0844,0874; 25:0043,0051-0444,
0449, 0458, 0619,0793, 0799, 0840, 0857,
0862,0868; 26: 0154,0165,0185; 27: 0001,
0334, 0536, 0621,0680-0703, 0736-0838;
28: 0001, 0140, 0167, 0606
USSR 19: 0422; 22: 0558; 23: 0014
Yugoslavia 3: 0001
see also titles of individual publications
Public Ownership League of America
24: 0101
Public works projects
labor 23: 0218
see also Civilian Conservation Corps; Works
Progress Administration
Puerto Rico
Communist Party of Puerto Rico 19:0192
election campaigns 19:0192
nationalists 10: 0732
Quinlan, Patrick
14:0212; 28:0167
Quitzan, Otto
17:0749
Race relations
antidiscrimination bill 15:0232
antilynching bill 9:0148
Civil Rights Federation of Detroit, Michigan
13:0069
Communist activities among black Americans
4: 0658,0872; 5: 0201,0443, 0871; 6: 0001,
0290,0604,0775; 7: 0001, 0136, 0385, 0525,
0958; 8:0001,0608,0810; 9: 0001,0370;
10: 0001; 11: 0001; 12: 0001; 13: 0069;
14:0212; 19:0171,0422; 21: 0027, 0175, 0284,
0755,0852; 23: 0588; 24: 0001,0101,0278,
0469
Communist activities among Japanese-Americans
5: 0201; 21: 0738
discrimination 8: 0389; 10: 0533; 11: 0356
general 4: 0257
Hemdon, Angelo 7:0385,0781,0958; 8:0609,
0810; 9:0601; 10:0165
National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People 14: 0212
race riots 8: 0389; 9: 0001; 19: 0171, 0211;
24:0810,0844
sharecroppers unions 7: 0136; 9: 0601; 10: 0360
see also Anti-Semitism; Ku Klux Klan
Radical activities
Connecticut 13: 0567
general 17: 0749,0769; 18: 0001, 0176,0208,
0473; 19: 0038,0049, 0211; 20: 0379,0558,
0613; 21: 0027, 0355, 0445,0480, 0485, 0519,
0552; 22: 0346, 0369, 0546; 23: 1039; 24: 0564;
25:0444,0458, 0793, 0799,0857, 0861 ;
26: 0165; 27: 0787, 0838; 28: 0001, 0167,
0387,0606, 0649, 0849, 0896
Missouri 13: 0870
New Hampshire 24:0844
New Jersey 24: 0847; 25: 0715
New York 14: 0001,0212
Ohio 20: 0879
Pacific Coast 15: 0889
Pennsylvania 14: 0694
Virginia 14: 0877
Radio broadcasts
8: 0608,0810; 10:0165, 0360; 11: 0001, 0356,
0907; 12: 0102,0307,0987; 13: 0069,0419;
20:0857; 22:0558
Raids
U.S. Department of Labor 17: 0680
see also U.S. Department of Justice
Railroads
bankruptcy 13:0631
radical activities 21: 0552
72
Rutgers, S. J.
19: 0422
Ruthenberg, Charles E.
20: 0859, 0948; 25: 0799, 0840; 28: 0167
Sacco-Vanzetti case
3: 0001; 16: 0044,0217, 0453, 0657; 17: 0001,
0277,0440,0502; 19: 0214; 25: 0054,0177,
0179,0198,0209,0218, 0279
Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee
14:0212; 16:0044,0217, 0453; 17: 0277, 0440;
25:0179
see also Citizens National Committee for Sacco and
Vanzetti
Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Fund
25:0218
Sackarow, Rebecca
20:0613
Sacramento, California
Sacramento Beeil: 0428
Workers School 23:0169
Sailors
see Seamen
Salutsky.J. B.
14:0212
Samson, Roy
14:0948,0956
Sandburg, Carl
1:0001
Schevenals, Walter
21:0453
Schneider, Alexander P.
20: 0882
Schnelderman, William
13:0202; 22:0894
Schulenberg, Gustave
20:0613
Schwartz, M. Alexander
20: 0422
Schwimmer, Roslka
20: 0258
Scottsboro Boys
see Protests
Seamen
merchant 18: 0170; 19:0422; 20:0250
Searles, Ellis
27:0787
Second Congress of the Comintern
2: 0832; 20: 0422
Second International
general 18: 0473,0885; 20: 0001
Fourth Congress 5: 0215
see also Socialist
Senior, Clarence
4:0448
Serbian Congressional Club
20:0938
Seventh Congress of the Comintern
24:0001,0737,0795
Share Croppers Union
7: 0136; 9: 0601
Railroad workers
strikes 18: 0688; 20: 0613
Railway Labor Executives Association
6:0290
Rakocevlch, Tomas
18: 0187; 25: 0460
Rand School of Social Science
14: 0212; 27: 0787, 0838
"Red Europe"
17: 0755
Red International of Trade Unions
see Profintern
Reed, John
1:0056; 14: 0617; 26: 0185
Registration of foreign agents
in the United States 13: 0202
Reinstein, Boris
14: 0212; 18: 0691; 27: 0838
Religion
fanaticism 18: 0882
Resolutions
U.S. Congress 1: 0815; 2: 0001,0216,0464, 0666
Richter, A. W.
26:0466
Ringo, Charles R.
23:0150
Riots
United States 8: 0389; 9: 0001
West Indies 9: 0148
Rivera, Diego
6: 0290; 14: 0959; 24: 0774
Road construction
Arkansas 15: 0806
Rock Island, Illinois
mass meetings 19: 0192
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
23: 0146
Rosenwald, Julius
17:0001
Rozan, Maxwell M.
21:0594
Russell, Bertrand
17:0769
Russia
property of government in the United States 1: 0815
see also Immigrants; Soviet Russia; USSR
Russian Infornation Bureau
21: 0399
Russian National Revolutionary Party
23: 0250,0544; 24: 0741
Russian Orthodox Church in America
19:0051
Russian Society to Aid National Russia
19:0214
Russian Soviet Government Bureau
officials 1: 0001,0028,0815,1069,1142; 14: 0001;
15: 0380,0603; 20: 0281; 26: 0185; 28:0649
request for property of Russian government in the
United States 1:0815
see also Soviet Russia
73
Sinclair, Robert
21:0401
Sinclair, Upton
8: 0608
Sinn Fein
13: 0717; 14: 0212; 17: 0769; 18: 0001
Skeffington, Henry J.
17:0571
Skvirsky, Boris
21:0399
Slogans
May Day 6: 0290
Smith, Gerald L. K.
11:0195
Smith, John
15: 0793; 25: 0039
Smith, Mildred C.
15: 0768
Smith, Paul J.
3: 0386
Socialist
activities•Canada 5: 0638
activities•Switzerland 17: 0674
international 9: 0370; 18: 0885
see also Second International
Socialist Labor Party of America
general 2: 0472; 9: 0601; 10: 0165; 11: 0907;
24: 0511, 0874; 27: 0001, 0838; 28: 0636
Illinois 13: 0652
Ohio 14: 0646
Socialist Party of America
Connecticut 13: 0567
convention•St. Louis 28: 0167
election campaigns 24: 0840; 27: 0736
general 11: 0001, 0356; 12: 0)02; 15: 0603,0903,
0934; 16: 0217; 17: 0001, 0537; 24: 0878;
25: 0634; 26: 0466; 27: 0001, 0691 ; 28: 0387,
0606, 0636
Indiana 13: 0708
Iowa 13: 0717
Left Wing Conference 27: 0482, 0532; 28: 0030
Missouri 13: 0870
New York 2: 0001; 14:0212,0617
Pennsylvania 14: 0694
publications 5: 0001
Virginia 14: 0877
Socialist Workmen's International
Fourth Congress 4: 0448
Society for the Relief of Soviet Russia
14:0212
Solomon, Abraham
20: 0278
Solomon, Charles
13:0870
South Africa
anti-Bolshevik laws 2: 0001
South African Labor party 27: 0482
South America
Communist activities 6: 0290
see also entries under individual countries
South Cardlina
general 14:0821
Southern natlon&llsin
20:0968
Southern Organizing Campaign
American Federation of Labor 3: 0386
Southern Tenant Farmers Union
10: 0360
Southern Worker
21:0852
Soviet Russia
agents 20: 0243, 0613
American Relief Administration programs in
20: 0335
American technical advisors 4: 0001; 17: 0628;
18:0700; 21: 0264; 24:0278
American visitors 14: 0212, 0694; 17: 0614, 0628;
18: 0832; 20: 0422; 25: 0799; 27: 0680;
28: 0165, 0387
arsenal in United States•alleged 21: 0673
Bolshevist activities 18: 0001
colonization of Jews in 4: 1023; 5: 0001; 22: 0339
commercial relations with 1: 0815
Communist activities 3: 0001, 0296, 0880
diplomatic relations
Canada 21: 0386
Finland 18: 0473
general 14: 0212; 19: 0214 20: 0335
Germany 18: 0473; 25: 0466
Great Britain 18:0208
Persia 17: 0769
United Sutes 18: 0802; 20: 0281, 0335;
24: 0847
economic conditions 19: 0214; 20: 0274, 0281,
0288,0355
emigrants to 1: 0452, 0724; 3: 0001; 27: 0334
espionage 21: 0775,0910, 0934; 22: 0285
foreign agents 20: 0243; 22: 0408, 0420,0441,
0775, 0934; 25: 0731, 0868
intervention protested 20: 0288
labor 20: 0335
laws 18: 0473
motion pictures 21: 0175, 0264
publications 18: 0774; 19: 0214; 25: 0291
Society for the Relief of Soviet Russia 14: 0212
support for 13: 0519; 14: 0638; 18: 0977; 20: 0274,
0288, 0355
Supreme Council of National Economy 20: 0281
see also Bolshevist; Propaganda; Russia; USSR
Spain
Communist activités 4: 0448; 6: 0001,0290
labor problems 4: 0448
Spanish Civil War 11: 0001, 0356; 12: 0307,0457;
20:0001; 21:0453; 22: 1041
Trade Union Relief for Spain 21: 0453
Spence, Matilda Cbapin
21:0848
Spezlale, Calogero
20:0255; 25: 0783
74
Summer employees
National Park Service 22: 0399
Sun Yat-sen
21:0506
Surmacz, J. J.
19:0038
Surveillance
coordination of federal 12: 0457; 14: 0694
see also Radical activities
Swartz, Maude
26:0466
Sweden
Communist activities 5: 0638; 6: 0290; 10: 0360;
19: 0422
Switzerland
anti-Communist laws 12: 0102
mass meetings 17:0674
Socialist activities 17: 0674
union organization 17:0674
Syndicalists' League of North America
publications 26: 0154
Syria
immigrants•U.S. 18: 0882
Tampa Tobacco Workers Industrial Union
8:0208
Technical advisors
American in Soviet Russia 4: 0001 ; 17: 0628;
18: 0700
American in the USSR 5: 0215; 8: 1017
see also Visitors
Tenants League
15:0761
Texas
general 14: 0837
Textile workers
8:0208
Third Congress
Comintern 18: 0473
Third International
see Comintern
Thomas, Martin Luther
11: 0519,0718,0907; 12: 0307; 13: 0419
Thomas, Norman
11: 0001; 20: 0434
The Toiler
27:0838
Tokoi, Oskari
20: 0300
Toohey, Pat
24:0267
Tourian, Leon
15: 0854; 22: 1074; 23: 0059
Townsend, Francis E.
9: 0148
Trachtenberg, Alexander L.
27:0691
Trade Commissions
USSR in Canada 21: 0386
Spizak, Andre J.
18:0982
Spooner, Ralph
18:0425
Spry, S. N.
12: 0307
S.S. Shinyomaru
18: 0433
Stalin, Joseph
18:0774
State legislation
Alaska 19: 0057
California 10: 0001; 19: 0057; 23: 0169
District of Columbia 10: 0533
general 20: 0402, 0859; 22: 0492; 24: 0001, 0622;
25:0218, 0799, 0818; 27: 0482, 0532
Idaho 14: 0927
Michigan 8: 0389; 20: 0434, 0589; 22: 0492
Nebraska 13: 0900
New Jersey 25:0715
New York 12: 0001; 14: 0212, 0617; 27: 0482, 0532
Pacific Coast 15: 0889
protests against 19: 0057
Wyoming 15: 0365
State relief agencies
California 13: 0419; 24: 0786
Statistics
CPUS A membership 6: 0001; 11: 0907
Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union
24: 0461
Steel Workers Organizing Committee
11:0356
Steffens, Lincoln
16:0217, 0453; 18: 0473
Stevenson, Archibald E.
15: 0232; 22: 0558; 25: 0001,0023, 0715
Stokes, J. G. Phelps
28:0649
Stokes, Rose Pastor
20: 0613; 27: 0715; 28: 0167,0387, 0649, 0849,
0896
Strikebreaking
7: 0136,0385; 8: 0389,1017
Strikes
4: 0257,0872; 5: 0215,0443,0871; 6: 0604,0775;
7: 0001,0136, 0958; 8: 0001, 0208,1017;
9: 0001,0148; 10:0001; 12:0745; 13:0001,
0950; 14: 0212, 0646,0959; 18: 0001,0401,
0473, 0688; 20: 0613;21:0433, 0688; 22: 0377,
0473; 24: 0810,0874
see also General strikes
Strong, Anna Louise
19: 0422
Student Volunteer Convention
21:0117
Subversive Activities Control Board
23:1073
Summer camps
21: 0679; 22: 0492; 25: 0608
75
0920,0950; 14: 0212, 0617,0638, 0694, 0830,
0927,0948,0959; 15: 0001, 0232, 0365,0413,
0774,0797, 0889,0908, 0913; 16: 0044-0657;
17: 0001, 0537, 0616,0674,0769; 18: 0001,
0170, 0189-0401,0414, 0437, 0691, 0761,
0788; 19: 0214, 0422; 20: 0001, 0375,0379,
0395,0854, 0948; 21: 0018,0027, 0097, 0284,
0433, 0453, 0541,0688, 0691, 0852; 22: 0346,
0377; 23: 0014, 0171, 0232,0588,1066;
24: 0001, 0101, 0197-0267,0461, 0511, 05860663, 0707,0764,0810, 0831,0874, 0881;
25: 0218, 0715; 26: 0001, 0154, 0165,0185,
0466; 27: 0001,0334, 0536,0777-0838;
28: 0387-0636
see also entries under individual unions
United Anthracite Workers of Pennsylvania
8: 1017; 9: 0001
United Automobile Workers of America
24:0764
United Cannery, Agricultural, and Allied Workers
of America
13:0202
United Communist Party of America
general 17: 0537; 27: 0334,0536, 0838; 28: 0001
Michigan 18:0901
New York 14: 0212
Pennsylvania 14: 0694
United Farmers' Educational League
21:0284
United Farmers League of America
4: 0448,0658; 7:0136; 22: 0001,0015; 23: 0093
United Federal Workers of America
12:0102
United Mine Workers of America
5: 0871; 7: 0001,0385; 8:1017; 13: 0652;
15:0365; 20:0854; 21:0541
United Russian Professional Workers
14:0212
United Textile Workers of America
3:0386;8:0810
Unity convention
14: 0212
Uruguay
anti-Communist activities 10: 0533
Communist activities 5:0001,0871
U.S. armed forces
Communist activities 24: 0586,0622
U.S. Army
arsenals 22:0028
U.S. Army Transport Buford 15:0380
U.S. Conciliation Service
21:0541,0688,0691
U.S. Congress
antilynching bill 9: 0148
Civil Liberties Committee 17: 0566
Committee on Un-American Activities 7: 0781;
8: 0001,0208, 0810, 1017; 9: 0001, 0148, 0601;
12: 0102, 0307, 0457, 0854,0987; 13: 0001,
0069, 0202; 17: 0680; 22: 0735, 0894; 23: 0109,
0115,0788, 0850; 24: 0663,0774
Trade Union Relief for Spain
21:0453
Trade Union Unity Conference
15:0913
Treason
prosecutions•U.S. 4: 1023
Tresca, Carlo
14:0212; 27:0838
Trevor, John B.
23:1034
Trinidad
anti-Communist laws 5: 0871
labor problems 11: 0519
Trotsky, Leon
3: 0296; 15: 0603; 18: 0691; 20: 0247; 24: 0774;
25: 0776
True, James
23: 0788, 0850
The Truth
27: 0736, 0777
TUEL
3: 0001; 20: 0388,0613, 0957; 25: 0868
Tulsa, Oklahoma
race riots 19:0171,0211; 24: 0844
TUUL
3: 0296,0517,0623; 4: 0001, 0448, 0658; 5: 0001,
0638,0871; 6: 0001, 0775; 8: 0208, 0608, 1017;
9: 0001; 15: 0001,0913; 19: 0214; 20: 0001,
0957; 21: 0453, 0852; 24: 0001,0230, 0267
Tzekoff, Tedor
21:0441
Ukraine
separatist movement 11:0718,0907; 12: 0102,
0457, 0607, 0745; 13: 0419; 19: 0800; 20: 0001,
0266
Un-American activities
protested 20: 0306
see also Anti-Communist; U.5|. Congress
Unemployment
Great Britain 17:0769
international 19: 0422
Mexico 5:0443
United States 3: 0517,0623,0880; 4: 0001,0257,
0872,1023; 5: 0001, 0215,0443,0638,0871;
6: 0604,0945; 7: 0001,0136, 0385,0525, 0781;
8: 0001,0208, 0389,0608; 9: 0001, 0148, 0601,
0835; 10: 0165,0360; 11: 0001; 13:0202;
14:0212; 15:0001; 16:0001; 19: 0171;
22: 0001,0377; 24: 0230,0267,0511,0564
Union of Russian Workers
13: 0567; 26: 0001, 0185; 27: 0001, 0334
see also Federation of Unions of Russian Workers
Union organization
1: 0815; 2: 0001; 3: 0001-0880; 4: 0001-1023;
5: 0001,0215, 0443, 0871; 6: 0290-0945;
7: 0001-0958; 8: 0001,0208, 0608-1017;
9: 0148-0835; 10: 0001-0732; 11: 0001-0519,
0907; 12: 0307, 0607, 0987; 13: 0001,0511,
0519, 0567-0627, 0652, 0825, 0870, 0896,
76
Committee to Investigate Communist Activities
3: 0623,0880; 5: 0001; 6: 0001
investigatíons 10: 0732; 11: 0195; 13: 0825,0856;
14:0001; 15:0861,0875; 20:0422,0613;
21: 0162, 0355, 0755; 24: 0101, 0165,0168,
0622; 26: 0170; 27: 0001,0536, 0787
legislation 2: 0001, 0216; 5: 0001; 8: 0208,0810,
1017; 9: 0001, 0148,0601,0835; 12: 0457;
14: 0694; 15: 0001, 0232; 16: 0044; 18:0804;
20: 0463; 24: 0001, 0165, 0168, 0829; 25: 0001,
0023
resolutions 1: 0815; 2: 0001, 0216,0464, 0666;
3:0386
Subcommittee to Investigate Mexican Affairs
14:0837
visitors to Soviet Russia 17: 0628
U.S. Constitution
Child Labor Amendment 8: 0810
free speech issues 20: 0894; 21: 0355; 28: 0030,
0140,0167,0387,0606, 0636, 0849, 0896
U.S. Department of Justice
investigations 13: 0202; 14:0948; 15:0375;
17: 0680; 18: 0405; 19:0038; 20: 0402,0434,
0589; 21: 0433, 0703, 0755; 23: 0182,1066;
24:0168, 0578; 25: 0001, 0041, 0279,0302,
0454,0715; 26: 0170; 27: 0482, 0532,0536,
0621, 0787; 28: 0167,0387,0606,0636, 0649,
0849
raids 13: 0567,0825, 0915; 14: 0001,0646, 0917;
15: 0001, 0407, 0413, 0597,0768, 0777,0793,
0854; 17: 0277; 18: 0911; 20: 0434, 0589, 0613;
24: 0278, 0453, 0805, 0874; 25: 0799; 26: 0001,
0170, 0185, 0466; 27: 0001, 0334, 0536,0621
relations with other agencies 12: 0457; 14: 0694;
15:0765; 18: 0758, 0832; 19: 0192; 21: 0703,
0775; 24: 0101,0345, 0771,0771; 25: 0039,
0607; 26: 0001, 0185, 0466; 27: 0001,0334,
0621,0787
report on assistant secretary of labor 27: 0621
report on illegal practices of 2: 0216; 14: 0001;
27:0001
Sacco-Vanzetti case 16: 0044,0217,0453,0657;
17:0001, 0277; 25: 0177,0179
seizures of publications 18: 0683, 0700,0758;
19: 0038
Subversive Activities Control Board 23: 1073
see also Surveillance
U.S. Department of Labor
dismissal of lawsuit 18: 0433
raids 17: 0680
U.S. Department of Justice report on assistant
secretary of labor 27: 0621
see also Deportations; U.S. Department of Justice•
relations with other agencies
U.S. Department of State
investigations 23: 0250
see also U.S. Department of Justice•relations with
other agencies
U.S. Medical Corps
personnel 14:0956
U.S. Navy
intelligence division 21:0775; 23: 0115, 0146,
0171, 1063; 24: 0165, 0230
personnel 22:0526
report on Communist activities 4: 0448
theft of weapons from vessels 5: 0638
U.S. Post Office Department
censorship of mails 14:0923; 15:0380; 23: 1063;
27:0621,0703
Communist activities in 18: 0182
servie©•USSR 21: 0522
summaries of publications 18:0001
see also U.S. Department of Justice•relations with
other agencies
U.S. president
assassination•planned 16: 0024; 20: 0463;
23:0146
pardons 28: 0030, 0167, 0649
USSR
American technical advisors in 5:0215; 8: 1017;
19: 0422; 20: 0001; 21: 0594, 0755; 23: 0001
American visitors to 5: 0001; 10: 0001; 19: 0422;
20:0001; 23: 0150; 24: 0586, 0732
arrest of missionary in 15: 0886
diplomatic relations
Canada 21: 0386
Egypt 6: 0290
Finland 23: 0059
general 19: 0422, 0800; 20: 0001
Great Britain 21: 0386, 0424
the Netherlands 19: 0422
United States 6: 0775; 7: 0001, 0136; 18: 0802;
23: 0250
economic development 5: 0215; 19:0422,0800;
20:0001; 21: 0175, 0386, 0424
elections 19:0800
espionage 23: 0059
foreign agents 23: 0059; 24: 0586,0707,0729
immigrants to 6:0001
laws 10: 0533; 19: 0422,0800
living conditions in 6: 0001
military buildup 4: 0658
postal service•U.S. 21: 0453
propaganda 19: 0422,0800; 20: 0001
publications 23: 0014
see also Russia; Soviet Russia
U.S. Supreme Court
cases 28: 0030
U.S. Treasury Department
censorship 21: 0175
see also U.S. Department of Justice•relations with
other agencies
U.S. Virgin Islands Socialist Party
20:0416
Utopian societies
3: 0623; 7: 0136,0525,0781; 9: 0001,0148;
10: 0533; 13: 0504
77
Valparaiso University
18: 0770
Van Gelder, PhUlip
23:0171
Vanzetti, Bartolomeo
see Sacco-Vanzetti case
Vassar College
World Youth Congress meeting 12: 0102
Vaughn, George C.
14: 0212
Venezuela
anti-Communist laws 10: 0533
Veterans
Bonus Army 5: 0638; 6: 0001; 22: 0333
general 16: 0001; 22: 0333, 0410
Spanish Civil War 22: 1041
Veterans of Foreign Wars of America 13: 0825;
22: 0552
Workers' Ex-Servicemen's League 22: 0328,0333
see also American Legion
Vigilantes and Allied Organizations
11:0356,0519
Violence
bombings 3: 0296
labor disputes 3: 0386
Virginia
general 14: 0877
Visitors
Americans to Soviet Russia 14: 0212, 0694;
17: 0614, 0628; 18: 0832; 20: 0422
American to the USSR 5: 0001; 10: 0001; 19: 0422;
20:0001
see also Technical advisors
Vollbrecht, Otto
15:0871
Volosewitch, Ivan
21:0751
Vonsiatsky, Anastase A.
23:0250, 0544; 24: 0741
Waldman, Louis
13: 0870
Wallerstein, David
21:0355
Walsh, Frank P.
16: 0657; 17: 0277
Ward, Harry F.
15: 0889; 17: 0680; 20: 0434; 21: 0355
War Resistors League
6:0290
see also Anti-war movement
Washington (state)
general 14: 0900
see also Pacific Coast
Washington, D.C.
see District of Columbia
Washington's Body Guard
22:0410
Waton, Harry
14:0212
Watt, John J.
15:0913
Weinstein, Gregory
1: 0815; 13: 0652; 15: 0603
Weinstone, William W.
6: 0775; 20: 0613
Welsh, Francis Ralston
17: 0680; 20: 0957; 21: 0001, 0333, 0355; 25: 0799,
0862; 27: 0536
West Chester, Pennsylvania
State Normal School 21: 0355
West Indies
anti-Communist laws 10: 0533
Communist activities 8: 0148
riots 9: 0148
strikes 9: 0148
West Virginia
Communist activities 22: 0406
general 14: 0904
Wheeler, Everett P.
20:0613
White, Walter
14:0212
Whitney, Anita
21:0679
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
U.S. Departyment of Justice raids 15: 0854
Williams, Constance
18: 0425
Wilson, William B.
15: 0908; 26: 0466
Wilson, Wocdrow
28:0649
Winitsky, Harry M.
20: 0859; 24: 0101; 27: 0532; 28: 0649
Wisconsin
Citizens Law and Order League of Milwaukee
24: 0586
general 14: 0917
legal defense 26: 0466
publications 25: 0619
Wolf, Charles H.
15: 0407
Wolfe, Bertram D.
21: 0001; 24: 0101
Woll, Matthew
4: 0257; 6: 0001; 7: 0001, 0781; 15: 0001;
20: 0957; 25: 0023, 0731
Women's Trade Union League
26:0466
Wood, Robert
13:0069
The Wortur
22: 0421
Workers Alliance of America
19: 0057; 25: 0713
Workers (Communist) Party of America
conventions 20: 0561
election campaigns 21: 0001, 0097
78
general 3: 0001; 19:0090,0171,0192; 20:0402,
0826, 0894,0948; 21: 0027,0162, 0172,0175,
0284,0461, 0541; 25: 0054,0218,0799;
27: 0680
publications 20: 0263; 25: 0840,0862
see also CPUSA
Workers Educational Association
18:0425
Workers Educational Bureau
19:0090
Workers Educational League
20:0561
Workers Educational Training Center
Yale University 18:0425
Workers' Ex-Servicemen's League
22: 0328, 0333
Workers' International Industrial Union
13:0825; 18:0001
Workers International Relief
4: 0658; 21: 0679; 25: 0785
Workers National Defense Committee
27: 0838
Workers School
Sacramento, California 23: 0169
Workers' Unity League of Canada
23: 0080
Workmen's Circle
21:0339
Works Progress Administration
student aid 23: 0201
workers 9: 0835; 11: 0356, 0519
World Anti-Fascist Society
18: 0804
World Youth Congress
meetings•Vassar College 12: 0102
Wright, Ada
5: 0871; 19: 0422
Wyoming
general 14: 0921
state legislation 15: 0359
Yale University
18: 0425
Young Communist League
Australia 4:0658
Central America 6: 0290
Communist International of Youth 20: 0001
South America 6: 0290
United States 3: 0386,0517; 4: 0257,0658; 5: 0215,
0638; 6: 0604, 0945; 7:0001, 0136, 0385, 0958;
8: 0810; 9: 0001, 0370,0601; 10: 0165, 0732;
11: 0356; 12: 0607; 13: 0419; 19: 0422;
20: 0323; 21: 0284,0461; 22: 0387,1064;
24:0001, 0101, 0197, 0230,0490, 0564;
25:0608
Young Communist Training School
25:0785
Young Men's Christian Association
Americanization work 2: 0832
educational programs 20: 0323
general 24: 0197
Young Pioneers of America
3: 0001,0386,0517, 0623, 0880; 5: 0215; 15: 0936;
21: 0546, 0679; 24: 0267; 25: 0043
Young Workers League
20:0418; 25: 0793
Youth Section of the Fellowship of Reconciliation
see Fellowship of Youth for Peace
Yucatan, Mexico
Communist schools 20: 0399
Yugoslavia
consulate in the United States 23:0104
Croatian nationalists 8: 0389,0608
immigrants to the United States 23: 0104; 25: 0460
radical publications 3: 0001
Zanco, Serge de
21:0449
Zemliakoff, Lvowich
22:0392
Zinoviev, Gregory
18:0774
Zucker, Morris
28: 0030,0140,0165
79
RESEARCH COLLECTIONS IN
AMERICAN RADICALISM
Department of Justice Investigative Files
Part I: The Industrial Workers of the World
Part II: The Communist Party
Records of the Subversive Activities
Control Board, 1950-1972
Part I: Communist Party USA
Part 11: Communist-Action and
Communist-Front Organizations
BLACK STUDIES RESEARCH SOURCES
Manuscript Collections from the Schomburg Center
for Research in Black Culture, The New York Library
Papers of the Civil Rights Congress
Papers of the International Labor Defense
Papers of the National Negro Congress
Newspapers of the American Communist Party
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
Research Collections in American Radicalism
General Editors:
Mark Naison and Maurice Isserman
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
PART III: The Use of Military Force by the Federal
Government in Domestic Disturbances, 1900–1938
A UPA Collection
from
Cover: William “Big Bill” Haywood, a prominent Industrial Workers of the World leader, in
Patterson, New Jersey, c. 1913. Photograph (part of the George Grantham Bain Collection)
courtesy of the Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Card #: ggb2005012764.
Research Collections in American Radicalism
General Editors:
Mark Naison and Maurice Isserman
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
INVESTIGATIVE FILES
PART III: The Use of Military Force by the
Federal Government in Domestic
Disturbances, 1900–1938
Project Editor
Robert E. Lester
Guide compiled by
Susan Leinbach
A UPA Collection from
7500 Old Georgetown Road • Bethesda, MD 20814-6126
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Department of Justice investigative files [microform].
p. cm. — (Research collections in American radicalism)
Accompanied by printed reel guides, compiled by Martin P. Schipper
and Susan Leinbach.
Includes indexes.
Contents: pt. 1. The Industrial Workers of the World / edited by
Melvyn Dubofsky—pt. 2. The Communist Party / edited by Mark Naison—
pt. 3. The Use of Military Force by the Federal Government in Domestic
Disturbances, 1900–1938.
ISBN 1-55655-055-3 (microfilm : pt. 1)
ISBN 1-55655-056-1 (microfilm : pt. 2)
ISBN 0-88692-744-7 (microfilm : pt. 3)
1. Industrial Workers of the World—History—Sources.
2. Communist Party of America—History—Sources. 3. United States.
Dept. of Justice—Archives. I. Schipper, Martin Paul.
II. Dubofsky, Melvyn, 1934– . III. Naison, Mark, 1946–
IV. United States. Dept. of Justice. V. University Publications of
America (Firm) VI. Series.
[HD8055]
322'.2—dc20
90-12989
CIP
Copyright © 2006 LexisNexis,
a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 0-88692-744-7.
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Scope and Content Note ..........................................................................................
Source Note ...............................................................................................................
Editorial Note ............................................................................................................
Abbreviations ............................................................................................................
v
ix
ix
xi
Reel Index
Reel 1
Glasser File, Box List ..........................................................................................
[Statutes] .............................................................................................................
[Background Material]
John Adams–Charles A. Beard ......................................................................
1
1
4
Reel 2
[Background Material cont.]
Bryce–Alex. Fraser Tytler ...............................................................................
5
Reel 3
[Strikes and Riots]
Arizona–Butte, Montana ..................................................................................
7
Reel 4
[Strikes and Riots cont.]
Butte, Montana cont.–Georgia ........................................................................
11
Reel 5
[Strikes and Riots cont.]
Hammond, Indiana–Texas ..............................................................................
14
Reel 6
[Strikes and Riots cont.]
Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma–Wyoming ..................................................
[Background Material]
Alien Enemy Proclamation [1917–1918]–Lumber [1917–1918] ......................
Reel 7
[Background Material cont.]
Lumber (1917–1918)–Retail Prices [1890–1921] ............................................
Reel 8
[Background Material cont.]
Retail Prices [1913–1920]–Utilities (Specific) [1917–1919] ............................
[Chronological Files]
1917 ................................................................................................................
iii
17
18
19
21
22
Reel 9
[Chronological Files cont.]
1918–1932 .......................................................................................................
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers]
Miscellaneous Memorandums [1937–1940]–Arizona
Copper Strikes [1917] ................................................................................
24
Reel 10
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers cont.]
Arizona (Duplicates [Drafts]) [1917–1918]–Lumber [1917] .............................
25
Reel 11
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers cont.]
Lumber (Duplicates) [1917]–Steel Strike [1919] .............................................
25
23
Reel 12
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers cont.]
Steel Strike [1919]–Materials Previously Withheld [1917–1920] .....................
[Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Decisions]
Table of Cases [1938–1939]–Rule 21 .............................................................
26
Reel 13
[Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Decisions cont.]
Rule 22–Rule 86 ..............................................................................................
[Journals and Law Reviews]
American Bar Association Journal–Albany Law Journal ................................
28
Reel 14
[Journals and Law Reviews cont.]
American Historical Association Annual Report–Irish Law Times ..................
26
30
30
Reel 15
[Journals and Law Reviews cont.]
Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology–
Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation .....................................
[Miscellaneous Material]
[1913]...............................................................................................................
33
Reels 16–19
[Miscellaneous Material cont.]
[1869–1939] .....................................................................................................
33
Principal Correspondents Index .............................................................................
Subject Index .............................................................................................................
37
47
iv
32
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE
This edition of Department of Justice Investigative Files, Part III: The Use of
Military Force by the Federal Government in Domestic Disturbances, 1900–1938,
contains a variety of telegrams, letters, reports, manuscripts, newspaper clippings,
and background materials that provide insight into the U.S. government’s use of
federal troops to restore and maintain order in cases of domestic disturbance,
particularly race riots and strikes.
These nineteen reels compose the “Glasser File,” a collection of documents that
Justice Department attorney Abraham Glasser assembled in the late 1930s while
drafting a study on the issue. As a side note of interest, Glasser was suspended
from the department in 1941 on charges of communism and espionage; he later
resigned based on a separate charge. Though he was not found guilty on the
communism charges, they continued to trail him through many other positions, and in
1953 he found it necessary to invoke the Fifth Amendment in testimony before the
House Un-American Activities Committee.
Glasser arranged the documents for this file into several loose groupings,
including background materials, chronological files, information on specific strikes
and riots, and handwritten drafts of his study. The background materials include all
U.S. statutes through 1937 pertaining to the militia, armed forces, customs
administration, and presidential powers, among other topics (Reel 1, Frames 0006–
0634). Next there are relevant excerpts from published works on constitutional law,
English law, and martial law, including the quoted views of founding fathers such as
John Adams, James Madison, and Thomas Jefferson (Reel 1, Frame 0635 through
the end of Reel 2).
Other background files present court decisions interpreting the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure (Reel 12, Frame 0259 through Reel 13, Frame 0952); articles from
law journals and other periodicals concerning martial, military, and constitutional law
(Reel 13, Frame 0953 through Reel 15, Frame 0345); Bureau of Labor Statistics data
on retail prices and wages (Reel 7, Frame 0532 through Reel 8, Frame 0510); federal
emergency plans for domestic disturbances, including protection of strategic
industries and buildings (Reel 8, Frames 0526–0698); World War I restrictions on
enemy aliens (Reel 6, Frame 0427); and surveillance of radical activities.
In his handwritten study drafts and working papers (Reel 9, Frame 0863 through
Reel 12, Frame 0258), Glasser places the “prodigal use of federal troops” in
historical context. He points out that during World War I, many of the states’ National
Guard forces that would have normally dealt with internal disturbances were serving
overseas, making it necessary to authorize federal troops to preserve domestic
order. Though this development was understandable, Glasser notes that the
president and the War Department further relaxed administrative standards by
abandoning the “preliminary proclamation required by law and customarily issued
before federal troops are used” in such circumstances (Reel 10, Frames 0716–
0717).
v
In addition to exploring the broader evolution of the “troop-habit,” Glasser
discusses several examples in detail, particularly the 1917 Arizona copper strikes;
the 1917–1920 miners’ strikes in Butte, Montana; the 1917 labor disturbances in
Washington State’s lumber industry; and the 1919 steel strike.
Throughout his study, Glasser quotes extensively from primary source
documents. The chronological files (Reel 8, Frame 0699 through Reel 9, Frame
0862) organize some of these original documents by year, from 1917 to 1932, for a
basic timeline overview, but the files relating to specific domestic disturbances form
the heart of the collection (Reel 3, Frame 0001 through Reel 6, Frame 0426). They
are arranged in alphabetical order by the state or city involved; the material covers
nearly thirty different states plus the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. Prominent
correspondents in these sections include Secretary of War Newton D. Baker,
General Tasker Bliss, Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge, Felix Frankfurter,
Arizona Governor George W. P. Hunt, U.S. Congresswoman Jeannette Rankin,
President Woodrow Wilson, and General Leonard Wood.
The importance of copper to the wartime effort heightened the federal
government’s concerns over the potential involvement of enemy aliens and other
subversives in the 1917 Arizona copper mine strikes. The presence of Mexican and
Austrian immigrants among the striking workers drew careful attention, as did the
Arizona governor’s possible ties to members of the radical labor organization
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). Government communications relating to the
Butte, Montana, copper strikes (1917–1920) reflect similar concerns. The telegrams
and letters collected here document the decisions to use federal troops in both
instances. In addition, there are documents on the infamous “Bisbee deportation” of
1917, in which armed vigilantes rounded up over one thousand striking miners in
Bisbee, Arizona, and abandoned them across the border in New Mexico. There are
also reports on federal investigations into the activities of known and suspected IWW
members in Arizona and Montana.
Investigations of IWW members and other radicals form a large portion of the files
on the steel strikes in Gary, Indiana (1919–1921) and the shipyard strikes in Seattle,
Washington (1918–1920). In October 1919, General Leonard Wood considered the
risk of violence in Gary so high that he placed the city under qualified martial law.
As in the case of copper, lumber was of key importance in the U.S. war effort,
particularly in the manufacture of aircraft. As the documents show, workers
employed in the Pacific Northwest lumber industry labored in isolated, “unsocial”
conditions and had unique concerns. Threats of violence and IWW activism among
the lumbermen in Washington State led to federal involvement in the situation and
even a proposal to form “lumber jack regiments” of military volunteers to procure the
needed lumber.
Military intervention was also a factor in the 1919 Boston, Massachusetts, police
strike and in strikes of streetcar workers in Chattanooga and Knoxville, Tennessee
(1917, 1919); Columbus and Savannah, Georgia (1918–1919); New Orleans,
Louisiana (1920); and Denver, Colorado (1920). Other incidents covered in these
files include strikes of dock workers (New Orleans, 1919; New York, 1919) and
garment workers (New York, 1917).
Federal troops proved useful in quelling racial violence as well as labor unrest.
There is material here on race riots in Arkansas (1919–1920); North Carolina (1918,
1920); Virginia (1918); Chicago, Illinois (1919); Lexington, Kentucky (1920); Omaha,
Nebraska (1919); Charleston, South Carolina (1919); and Washington, D.C. (1917,
vi
1919). On a few occasions, the federal government supplied troops for smaller scale
law and order duties, as in the case of the November 1917 Ivie Mickle murder trial in
Texas. During Prohibition, states such as Florida and New Jersey also requested
federal assistance in blocking the illegal importation and trafficking of alcohol.
The final few reels (from Reel 15, Frame 0346 through the end of Reel 19) contain
miscellaneous material. There is, for example, extensive correspondence from 1913
relating to the United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation antitrust litigation, as well as
deposition testimony from 1892 regarding a telephone patent case. Other items
include Congressional Record installments from 1934 and 1936, summaries of court
decisions affecting labor, post–World War I legal claims of U.S. businesses and
individuals against Germany, and ticket stubs.
This collection offers a detailed look into the early twentieth-century history of and
justifications for the federal government’s use of military force in maintaining
domestic order. Students of U.S. labor history, U.S. military history, or constitutional
law will find the documents especially useful.
The Department of Justice Investigative Files series also includes Part I: The
Industrial Workers of the World and Part II: The Communist Party. Other LexisNexis
titles concerning American radicalism and government surveillance include The
Communist Party USA and Radical Organizations, 1953–1960: FBI Reports From
the Eisenhower Library; FBI Files on Black Extremist Organizations; FBI Files on
White Extremist Organizations; Federal Surveillance of Afro-Americans (1917–
1925): The First World War, the Red Scare, and the Garvey Movement; Newspapers
of the American Communist Party; Radical Periodicals in the United States, 1881–
1960; Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, Series A: Subject
Correspondence Files, Part 6: Suppression of Radicals; Records of the Subversive
Activities Control Board, 1950–1972, Part I: Communist Party USA and Part II:
Communist-Action and Communist-Front Organizations; The Strike Files of the U.S.
Department of Justice, Part 1: 1894–1920; Surveillance of Radicals in the United
States, 1917–1941; and U.S. Army Surveillance of Dissidents, 1965–1972: Records
of the U.S. Army’s ASCI Task Force .
vii
SOURCE NOTE
This microform publication consists of records microfilmed from Record Group 60,
General Records of the Department of Justice, Miscellaneous Records, “Glasser
File,” at the National Archives, College Park, Maryland.
EDITORIAL NOTE
LexisNexis has filmed in their entirety all materials in the twenty boxes of “Glasser
File” records comprising Department of Justice Investigative Files, Part III: The Use
of Military Force by the Federal Government in Domestic Disturbances, 1900–1938,
as they are arranged at the National Archives.
ix
ABBREVIATIONS
The following abbreviations are used three or more times in this guide.
AFL
American Federation of Labor
FBI
Federal Bureau of Investigation
FRCP
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
IWW
Industrial Workers of the World
xi
REEL INDEX
The following index is a list of the folders that compose Department of Justice Investigative
Files, Part III: The Use of Military Force by the Federal Government in Domestic Disturbances,
1900–1938. The four-digit number on the far left is the frame at which a particular file folder
begins. The file title follows the frame number. Substantive issues are highlighted under the
heading Major Topics, as are prominent correspondents under the heading Principal
Correspondents. Major Topics and Principal Correspondents are listed in order of first
appearance and each topic or correspondent is listed only once for each folder.
Reel 1
Frame No.
0001
Glasser File, Box List.
[Statutes]
0006
1 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; customs administration; searches
and seizures; War Department; wars and military conflicts; Indian tribes;
international sanctions; Navy Department; aliens.
0057
2 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; Indian tribes; foreign trade;
searches and seizures; territories of the U.S.; crime and criminals; harbors and
ports; international sanctions.
0091
3 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; international sanctions; Indian
tribes; territories of the U.S.; crime and criminals.
0111
4 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; Indian tribes; customs
administration; territories of the U.S.
0126
5 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; Indian tribes; searches and
seizures.
0142
9 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; wars and military conflicts;
territories of the U.S.
0146
10 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; telecommunications; naval expeditions and surveys.
0150
11 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers.
1
Frame No.
0154
12 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; slaves and slavery; foreign trade;
insurgency; territories of the U.S.; Indian tribes; crime and criminals.
0193
13 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; territories of the U.S.; searches and
seizures; Indian tribes; telecommunications; insurgency; elections.
0204
14 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; territories of the U.S.; citizenship; presidential powers;
foreign trade; searches and seizures; territories of the U.S.; forced labor.
0226
15 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; elections; state government; Bureau of Refugees,
Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, Department of the Adjutant General; forced
labor; conservation of natural resources.
0237
16 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; state government; voting rights; conservation of natural
resources.
0245
17 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; Constitution of U.S.; insurgency; presidential powers;
territories of the U.S.
0252
18 Stat.
Major Topic: U.S. statutes.
0256
19 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; Indian tribes; territories of the U.S.
0263
20 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; diseases and disorders; presidential powers; territories
of the U.S.
0274
21 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; elections; presidential powers; Indian tribes.
0282
22 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; searches and seizures; harbors and ports; conservation
of natural resources.
0293
23 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; territories of the U.S.; conservation of natural resources;
presidential powers.
0300
24 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources; diseases and
disorders; presidential powers.
0305
25 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; Indian lands; harbors and ports; diseases and disorders;
riots and disorders; conservation of natural resources.
0319
26 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; diseases and disorders; presidential powers;
conservation of natural resources; disaster relief.
2
Frame No.
0328
27 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; diseases and disorders.
0333
28 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources; presidential powers;
diseases and disorders.
0341
29 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; rivers and waterways.
0344
30 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources; disaster relief;
searches and seizures; diseases and disorders; conservation of natural
resources.
0356
31 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; territories of the U.S.
0369
32 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources; Panama Canal;
diseases and disorders; presidential powers.
0381
33 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources.
0387
34 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; aliens; conservation of natural resources; territories of
the U.S.; searches and seizures; disaster relief.
0409
35 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources; disaster relief;
elections; slaves and slavery; searches and seizures.
0428
36 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; Constitution of U.S.; disaster relief.
0441
37 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; rivers and waterways; diseases and disorders;
conservation of natural resources; presidential powers; searches and seizures;
Constitution of U.S.; Panama Canal.
0453
38 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; disaster relief; conservation of natural resources;
neutrality.
0468
39 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; territories of the U.S.; conservation of natural resources;
disaster relief; Philippines; Puerto Rico.
0508
40 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; insurgency; wars and military
conflicts; conservation of natural resources; diseases and disorders.
0526
41 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; wars and military conflicts;
insurgency.
3
Frame No.
0545
42 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; disaster relief.
0554
43 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; searches and seizures; conservation of natural
resources; disaster relief.
0566
44 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; disaster relief.
0575
45 Stat.
Major Topic: U.S. statutes.
0579
46 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; territories of the U.S.; searches and seizures; disaster
relief; conservation of natural resources.
0591
47 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; conservation of natural resources; searches and
seizures; territories of the U.S.; Philippines; Panama Canal.
0599
48 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; Philippines; territories of the U.S.;
conservation of natural resources.
0607
49 Stat.
Major Topics: U.S. statutes; presidential powers; customs administration; foreign
trade; searches and seizures; conservation of natural resources; territories of the
U.S.
0631
Current [1937].
Major Topics: Military weapons; foreign trade; insurgency.
[Background Material]
0635
John Adams, Defense of the Constitution (1787).
0638
John Adams, Life and Works, Charles Francis Adams, ed., Vols. 4, 7, and 9 [1851–
1854].
Major Topics: Government-citizen relations; insurgency; civil-military relations.
0653
John Adams, Life and Works, Charles Francis Adams, ed., Vol. 10 [1851].
Major Topics: Civil-military relations; government-citizen relations; insurgency.
0662
John Quincy Adams [1875–1876].
Major Topics: Presidential powers; government-citizen relations; wars and military
conflicts; civil-military relations; crime and criminals; riots and disorders.
0694
American State Papers, Military Affairs (Vol. I) [1790–1819].
Major Topics: Government-citizen relations; civil-military relations; state government;
federal-state relations; presidential powers.
0788
American State Papers, Miscellaneous (Vol. II) [1813–1821].
Major Topic: Civil-military relations.
0797
1 Annals of Congress (1st Congress, 1st Session [1789]).
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; civil-military relations; military service.
4
Frame No.
0804
2 Annals of Congress (1st Congress, 2nd and 3rd Sessions, 1790–1791).
Major Topics: Civil-military relations; federal-state relations; presidential powers.
0822
3 Annals of Congress (2nd Congress, 1st and 2nd Sessions, 1791–1793).
Major Topics: Federal-state relations; presidential powers.
0854
4 Annals of Congress (3rd Congress, 1st and 2nd Sessions, 1793–1795).
0865
5 Annals of Congress (4th Congress, 1st Session, 1796).
0871
8 Annals of Congress (5th Congress, 2nd Session, 1798).
Major Topics: Presidential powers; Constitution of U.S.; aliens.
0963
10 Annals of Congress (6th Congress, 1st and 2nd Sessions [1799–1800]).
Major Topic: Insurgency.
0982
William R. Anson, The Law and Custom of the Constitution, Vol. III (1898).
Major Topics: Civil-military relations; military law.
0991
Charles A. Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United
States (1913).
Major Topics: Civil-military relations; insurgency.
Reel 2
[Background Material cont.]
0001
Bryce, American Commonwealth, 3rd edition, Vols. 1 and 2 (1909).
Major Topics: Presidential powers; federal-state relations; insurgency; Constitution of
U.S.; foreign relations; crime and criminals; riots and disorders.
0039
2 Elliot’s Debates—Connecticut.
Major Topic: Federal-state relations.
0047
2 Elliot’s Debates—Maryland.
0052
2 Elliot’s Debates—Massachusetts.
Major Topic: Constitution of U.S.
0062
2 Elliot’s Debates—New York.
Major Topic: Federal-state relations.
0082
2 Elliot’s Debates—Pennsylvania.
Major Topic: Federal-state relations.
0098
3 Elliot’s Debates—Virginia.
Major Topics: Presidential powers; federal-state relations.
0198
4 Elliot’s Debates—North Carolina.
Major Topics: Federal-state relations; presidential powers.
0222
4 Elliot’s Debates—South Carolina.
Major Topics: Presidential powers; federal-state relations.
0231
Farrand, Records (Vol. I).
Major Topics: Federal-state relations; presidential powers; government-citizen
relations.
5
Frame No.
0324
Farrand, Records (Vol. II).
Major Topics: Federal-state relations; presidential powers; slaves and slavery; wars
and military conflicts.
0418
Farrand, Records (Vol. III).
Major Topic: Federal-state relations.
0466
The Federalist (Lodge, ed., 1902).
Major Topics: Insurgency; federal-state relations; Constitution of U.S.; presidential
powers.
0542
Franklin [1836].
0545
Tatlow Jackson, Martial Law (pamphlet, 1862).
Major Topic: Martial law.
0547
Jefferson [1903–1904].
Major Topics: State government; insurgency; Constitution of U.S.; riots and
disorders; international sanctions; federal-state relations.
0654
Kent, Commentaries [1896].
Major Topics: Federal-state relations; presidential powers; crime and criminals.
0669
Madison Writings (Vol. I, Lippincott, ed., 1865).
Major Topics: Federal-state relations; presidential powers.
0697
Madison Writings (Vol. II, Lippincott, ed. 1865).
Major Topic: Presidential powers.
0706
Madison Writings (Vol. III, Lippincott, ed. 1865).
Major Topic: Presidential powers.
0713
Madison Writings (Vol. IV, Lippincott, ed. 1865).
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; federal-state relations; presidential powers.
0727
Maitland, The Constitutional History of England [1926].
Major Topics: Military law; martial law; police; insurgency.
0765
Samuel Smith Nicholas, Martial Law (1862).
Major Topic: Martial law.
0767
Nicolay and Hay, Lincoln [1905].
Major Topics: Riots and disorders; insurgency; federal-state relations; habeas
corpus; presidential powers; compulsory military service.
0820
Pollack, Expansion of the Common Law (1904).
Major Topic: Martial law.
0823
Richardson, Messages and Papers of the President, Vol. I (1896).
Major Topics: Insurgency; taxation.
0851
Ridges, Constitutional Law of England [1905].
Major Topics: Habeas corpus; martial law; military law.
0876
Rowle, A View of the Constitution of the U.S. [1829].
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; wars and military conflicts; treaties and
conventions; presidential powers; civil-military relations.
6
Frame No.
0899
Alexander H. Stephens, War between the States, Vol. II (1870).
Major Topics: Confederate States of America; habeas corpus; martial law;
presidential powers; insurgency; wars and military conflicts.
0917
J. F. Stephens, A History of the Criminal Law of England [1883].
Major Topics: Insurgency; martial law.
0940
Frederick Jesup Stimson, The American Constitution as It Protects Private Rights
(1923).
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; martial law; military law.
0951
Story, Commentaries on the Constitution, 2nd ed., Vols. I and II (1851).
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; federal-state relations; postal service; wars and
military conflicts; insurgency; habeas corpus; presidential powers; neutrality.
1028
Alex. Fraser Tytler, An Essay on Military Law and the Practice of Courts Martial
(1814).
Major Topics: Martial law; military law; habeas corpus.
Reel 3
[Strikes and Riots]
0001
Arizona (Bisbee, 1917).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; civil rights; copper and copper industry; IWW;
deportations; National Guard.
Principal Correspondents: John C. Walker Jr.; John C. Greenway; Henry P. McCain;
James J. Hornbrook; Newton D. Baker; James Parker; W. B. Wilson; Tasker
Bliss; Edward T. Donnelly.
0021
Arizona (Copper and IWW, 1917–1919).
Major Topics: IWW; labor disturbances; copper and copper industry; National Guard;
Austrians; Mexicans; deportations; extradition; troop withdrawal; propaganda;
AFL; investigation of IWW activities; communism.
Principal Correspondents: John C. Greenway; James J. Hornbrook; James Parker;
Henry P. McCain; Hugh M. Foster; Thomas E. Campbell; A. M. Johnson Jr.; A. T.
Thomson; Walter Douglas; Newton D. Baker; H. E. Mann; W. B. Wilson; Tasker
Bliss; Edward T. Donnelly; J. E. Lewis; John C. Walker Jr.; Tom Armer; Joseph
S. Myers; Frank Brown; George W. P. Hunt; B. M. Baruch; Lutz Wahl; Eugene H.
Mitchell; R. L. Barnes; J. H. Dengel; John G. Crowley; I. D. Reedy; J. A.
Blankenship; H. S. Dickey; G. L. Stancliff; Arthur Simon; Leon C. Booker;
DeR. C. Cabell; A. S. Morgan; J. T. Dickman; F. C. Harris.
0175
Arizona (Miami, 1917).
Major Topics: IWW; labor disturbances; copper and copper industry; troop
withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: James Parker; Henry P. McCain.
0182
Arizona [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Troop withdrawal; labor disturbances; IWW.
7
Frame No.
0194
Arizona (Adjutant General’s Office, Inserts) [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Troop withdrawal; copper and copper industry; labor disturbances;
IWW; Mexicans; treason; Austrians; federal-state relations; national defense;
civil-military relations; deportations; quartering of troops.
Principal Correspondents: George W. P. Hunt; Thomas E. Campbell; DeR. C. Cabell;
A. S. Morgan; F. C. Harris; James Parker; Henry P. McCain; A. M. Johnson Jr.;
Hugh M. Foster; Walter Douglas; Tom Armer; G. W. Shute; J. E. Lewis; Newton
D. Baker; Lutz Wahl; B. M. Baruch; George P. White; John W. Ruckman; W. B.
Wilson; E. D. Anderson; James J. Hornbrook; Tasker Bliss.
0279
Arizona (Globe, 1917).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; troop withdrawal; extradition; copper and
copper industry; enemy aliens.
Principal Correspondents: James Parker; John W. Ruckman; A. T. Thomson; Henry
P. McCain; G. R. McCain.
0296
Arizona (Jerome, 1917).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; enemy aliens.
Principal Correspondents: F. C. Harris; James Parker.
0299
Arizona (Jerome, Globe, etc., 1919).
Major Topics: IWW; labor disturbances; enemy aliens; earnings; troop withdrawal;
federal-state relations.
Principal Correspondents: Harry Carlson; M. Churchill; E. F. Kinkead; James A.
Presley; Warren G. David; F. C. Harris; DeR. C. Cabell.
0311
Arizona (Previously Withheld Materials) [1917–1918].
Major Topics: IWW; anarchists; labor unions; labor disturbances; Mexicans; ties of
Arizona Governor George W. P. Hunt to IWW members.
Principal Correspondents: John W. Gawzhorn; G. L. Stancliff; Henry P. McCain;
Leon C. Booker.
0348
Arizona (IWW, General, 1918–1919).
Major Topics: Mexicans; enemy aliens; IWW; labor disturbances; ties of Arizona
Governor George W. P. Hunt to IWW members; copper and copper industry.
Principal Correspondents: Robert E. Tally; I. D. Reedy; A. M. Johnson Jr.;
M. Churchill; R. L. Barnes; DeR. C. Cabell; J. T. Dickman; A. S. Morgan; Arthur
Simon; H. S. Dickey; Leon C. Booker.
0380
Arizona (Labor Department, Inserts) [1918].
Major Topic: Unemployment.
Principal Correspondents: Joseph S. Myers; Frank Brown.
0383
Arizona (Military Intelligence, Inserts) [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Troop withdrawal; IWW; labor disturbances; Mexicans; ties of Arizona
Governor George W. P. Hunt to IWW members; enemy aliens; Labor Department
representatives in Arizona.
Principal Correspondents: H. E. Mann; George W. P. Hunt; Edwin N. Hardy; DeR. C.
Cabell; R. B. Woodruff; J. T. Dickman; J. H. Dengel; John G. Crowley; I. D.
Reedy; Leon C. Booker; J. A. Blankenship; Eugene H. Mitchell; G. L. Stancliff.
0414
Arizona (Miscellaneous) [1924 and 1930–1931].
Major Topics: Census data (1930) for Arizona; mines and mineral resources;
earnings; hours of labor.
8
Frame No.
0486
Arizona (Photostats) [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; enemy aliens; civil-military relations; quartering of
troops at mining companies’ expense.
Principal Correspondents: James Parker; Tasker Bliss; Henry P. McCain; Lutz Wahl.
0503
Arkansas (Little Rock/General and 1921) [1917 and 1921].
Major Topics: Federal troops for protection of prisoner; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: Joe T. Robinson; Thomas McRea; H. L. Kerwin; Ben D.
Brickhouse.
0511
Arkansas, Race Riots (Elaine, October 1919; Dumas, January–February 1920; and
Helena).
Major Topics: African Americans; race riots; labor disturbances; troop withdrawal;
federal-state relations.
Principal Correspondents: Robert C. Poage; Charles H. Brough; H. L. Finley; Newton
D. Baker; W. F. Kirby; Joe T. Robinson; M. D. Wheeler; Edward P. Passailaigue;
Eugene E. Barton; R. C. Langdon; John B. Campbell.
0595
Astoria, Oregon (Shipbuilders, October 1917).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: Tasker Bliss; Henry P. McCain.
0602
Bogalusa, Louisiana (Sawmill, November 1919).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
0604
Boston, Massachusetts (Police Strike, September–October 1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; police; military arms and supplies; communism.
Principal Correspondents: F. C. Harris; Henry A. Frothingham; Calvin Coolidge;
Newton D. Baker; Henry F. Long; A. Mitchell Palmer; D. Chauncey Brewer; H. A.
Strauss; E. R. W. McCabe; M. Churchill; Theodore K. Spencer.
0641
Butte, Montana [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Earnings; copper and copper industry; labor disturbances; labor
unions; IWW; Anaconda Copper Mining Company labor contract; “rustling card”
system (employment cards sometimes used for blacklisting miners);
Representative Jeannette Rankin.
Principal Correspondents: W. H. Rodgers; W. B. Wilson; B. M. Baruch; Con.
[Cornelius] F. Kelly; Newton D. Baker; H. L. Myers; G. Y. Harry; Thomas Barker;
Thomas J. Chope.
0680
Butte [Montana] (1917).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; “rustling card” system (employment cards
sometimes used for blacklisting miners).
Principal Correspondent: Jeannette Rankin.
0689
Butte [Montana] (March–April 1918).
Major Topics: Civil-military relations; police; labor disturbances; IWW; labor unions;
amendment of Espionage Act; War Labor Policies Board; AFL; settlement of
labor disputes; military detention and arrest.
Principal Correspondents: T. W. Gregory; Thomas J. Chope; Thomas Barker; Hywel
Davies; W. B. Wilson; John Lord O’Brian; Felix Frankfurter; Alfred Bettman; J. B.
Wilson; M. Churchill; Newton D. Baker; John W. Heavey; Arthur Murray.
9
Frame No.
0737
Butte [Montana] (Fall 1918).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; military detention and arrest.
Principal Correspondents: J. H. Dengel; M. Churchill; G. Aertsen Jr.; John W.
Heavey.
0757
Butte [Montana] (February–November 1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; earnings; enemy aliens; treatment of
returned soldiers acting as pickets.
Principal Correspondents: F. B. Watson; J. F. Morrison; Will H. Germer; Henry
Jervey; William B. Osgood Field; J. T. Walsh; F. C. Harris.
0787
Butte [Montana] (April–May 1920 etc.).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; troop withdrawal; radical newspaper Butte
Daily Bulletin; civil-military relations.
Principal Correspondents: John R. Kelly; Newton D. Baker; N. H. Lamar; Herman
Hall; S. V. Stewart; A. S. Peake; H. F. Hodges; A. B. Coxe; Henry Jervey;
Edward B. Jackson; Herbert G. Esden; John D. Ryan; H. Liggett; Roger Williams
Jr.; W. C. DeWare; R. J. Herman; A. D. Chaffin.
0837
Butte [Montana] (IWW and Copper, 1917–1920), 1 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; military detention and arrest; treatment of
returned soldiers acting as pickets; deportations; radical newspaper Butte Daily
Bulletin; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Arthur Murray; M. Churchill; John Lord
O’Brian; Will H. Germer; J. H. Dengel; A. B. Bielaski; G. Aertsen Jr.; John W.
Heavey; J. T. Walsh; William B. Osgood Field; Henry Jervey; John R. Kelly;
H. Liggett; A. S. Peake; S. V. Stewart; Herman Hall; H. F. Hodges; A. D. Chaffin;
John D. Ryan; Newton D. Baker; R. J. Herman; Edward B. Jackson; A. B. Coxe;
N. H. Lamar; Herbert G. Esden; W. C. DeWare; Roger Williams Jr.
0915
Butte [Montana] (IWW and Copper, 1917–1920), 2 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; arrest of IWW agitator Joe Kennedy; military
detention and arrest; treatment of returned soldiers acting as pickets; earnings;
civil-military relations; radical newspaper Butte Daily Bulletin; Anaconda Copper
Mining Company; martial law; aliens; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Arthur Murray; John Lord O’Brian;
M. Churchill; J. H. Dengel; Will H. Germer; Rolin G. Watkins; A. B. Bielaski;
G. Aertsen Jr.; John W. Heavey; Elizabeth Kennedy; J. T. Walsh; William B.
Osgood Field; John R. Kelly; H. Liggett; A. S. Peake; S. V. Stewart; Herman Hall;
H. F. Hodges; R. J. Herman; A. D. Chaffin; John D. Ryan; Newton D. Baker;
Edward B. Jackson; A. B. Coxe; Herbert G. Esden; W. C. DeWare; Roger
Williams Jr.
0998
Butte [Montana] (Labor Department) [1917].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW.
Principal Correspondent: William C. Pitts.
10
Frame No.
Reel 4
[Strikes and Riots cont.]
0001
Butte [Montana] (War Department) [1918–1919].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW agitators; Joe Kennedy; Anaconda Copper
Mining Company; parade demonstration; arrests.
Principal Correspondents: J. H. Dengel; Rolin G. Watkins; M. Churchill; Will H.
Germer; John Lord O’Brian; O. N. Bradley.
0031
Butte [Montana] (Wheeler) [1918].
Major Topics: Copper and copper industry; labor-management relations; IWW
philosophy.
Principal Correspondent: Hywel Davies.
0042
Butte [Montana] (Previously Withheld Materials) [1918 and 1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; radical newspaper Butte Daily Bulletin; Joe
Kennedy; military detention and arrest.
Principal Correspondents: A. S. Peake; J. H. Dengel; R. L. Barnes; Rolin G. Watkins;
A. B. Bielaski.
0055
California (Bethlehem Strike, 1918).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; compulsory military service; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Neal C. Johnson; William Kelly Jr.
0063
Centralia, Washington [1919–1920].
Major Topic: IWW activities.
Principal Correspondents: John M. Dunn; A. B. Coxe; Thomas B. Crockett;
M. Churchill.
0070
Chattanooga, Tennessee (Streetcar, September 1917), 1 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; military action restricted to protection of life and
property; parade demonstration.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Tom C. Rye; A. B. Fox; Newton D.
Baker.
0091
Chattanooga, Tennessee (Streetcar, September 1917), 2 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; military action restricted to protection of life and
property; parade demonstration.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Tom C. Rye; Newton D. Baker; A. B.
Fox.
0113
Chicago, Illinois (Race Riots, July–November 1919), 1 of 2.
Major Topics: African Americans; race riots; arson.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas B. Crockett; Donald C. Van Buren.
0129
Chicago, Illinois (Race Riots, July–November 1919), 2 of 2.
Major Topics: Race riots; deaths; living conditions for African Americans; police;
coroner Peter M. Hoffman.
Principal Correspondents: Peter M. Hoffman; R. Keene Ryan; John P. Brushingham;
William J. Dillon; O. W. McMichael.
0159
[Denver] Colorado (1920).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; riots and disorders; Denver Post; labormanagement relations; earnings.
11
Frame No.
Principal Correspondents: W. A. Foertmeyer; Gordon Johnston; A. Boettcher;
George M. Russell.
0179
Columbus, Georgia (Cotton Mill/Street Car, August 1918 and February 1919),
1 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; riots and disorders; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Newton D. Baker; Benjamin H.
Hardaway.
0197
Columbus, Georgia (Cotton Mill/Street Car, August 1918 and February 1919),
2 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; riots and disorders; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Newton D. Baker; Henry P. McCain; Benjamin H.
Hardaway.
0215
Columbus, New Mexico (IWW, August–September 1917).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; aliens; IWW members.
Principal Correspondents: W. E. Lindsey; Newton D. Baker; Tasker Bliss; Henry P.
McCain.
0232
Denver, Colorado (Streetcar, August 1920).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; labor-management relations; earnings.
Principal Correspondent: A. Boettcher.
0243
East St. Louis, Illinois (July 1917).
Major Topics: African Americans; labor disturbances; riots and disorders; troop
withdrawal; police.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; George M. Brown; Peyton T. Karr; J. R.
Mathews; E. C. Andrews; Ralph W. Cavanaugh.
0264
[Key West] Florida (Prohibition) [1920].
Major Topics: Prohibition; alcohol imports.
Principal Correspondents: Sidney J. Catts; Newton D. Baker.
0269
Gary, Indiana, 1 of 6 [1919].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; deportations.
Principal Correspondents: W. B. Wilson; John H. Deyong; E. N. Nockels; John
Creighton.
0277
Gary, Indiana, 2 of 6 [1919–1921].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; riots and disorders; Constitution of U.S.;
censorship; searches and seizures; use of federally owned arms by nonfederal
employees; arrest and detention of aliens; “moonshine” still; investigation of
radicals and radical organizations; IWW activities; martial law proclamation.
Principal Correspondents: J. W. Barker; E. D. Anderson; Newton D. Baker; Charles
H. Brough; Henry Jervey; Leonard Wood; J. W. Ricketts; Francis P. T. Johnson
Sr.; F. C. Harris; W. F. Hodges; J. A. Ladd; William H. Wood; W. S. Mapes; Paul
S. Jones; Manton C. Mitchell; J. L. Chamberlain; John W. Weeks; J. M.
Wainwright; G. Le R. Irwin; John B. Campbell; Donald C. Van Buren; Thomas B.
Crockett; F. R. Waltz; A. L. Dade; M. Churchill; F. E. Westcott.
0433
Gary, Indiana, 3 of 6 [1919–1920].
Major Topics: Investigation of radicals and radical organizations; Paul P. Glaser;
William D. Haywood; IWW; labor disturbances; aliens; “moonshine” still.
12
Frame No.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas B. Crockett; John B. Campbell; Gordon Johnston;
M. Churchill; Jay H. Emerson; George W. Barr; Leonard Wood; W. F. Hodges;
A. B. Coxe; D. Ogden; L. R. Bryan; G. Y. Harry; William D. Mainwaring; John A.
Ryan; James Purcell; Daniel A. Poling; W. B. Wilson; F. J. McConnell.
0592
Gary, Indiana, 4 of 6 [1919–1920].
Major Topics: Investigation of radicals and radical organizations; labor disturbances;
IWW activities; martial law proclamation; William D. Haywood; Paul P. Glaser;
police; African Americans; aliens.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas B. Crockett; John B. Campbell; Jay H. Emerson;
George W. Barr; A. L. Dade; Leonard Wood; D. Ogden; W. F. Hodges; A. B.
Coxe; Donald C. Van Buren; F. R. Waltz; M. Churchill; W. S. Mapes; F. C. Harris.
0744
Gary, Indiana, 5 of 6 [1919–1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; labor conditions; troop withdrawal; arrests.
Principal Correspondents: L. R. Bryan; G. Y. Harry; William D. Mainwaring; John A.
Ryan; James Purcell; Daniel A. Poling; Thomas B. Crockett; E. D. Anderson;
F. E. Westcott; J. A. Ladd; M. Churchill; G. L. Morrow; E. H. Humphrey; W. B.
Wilson; F. J. McConnell.
0804
Gary, Indiana, 6 of 6 [1919–1921].
Major Topics: IWW; labor disturbances; investigation of radicals and radical
organizations; Paul P. Glaser; William D. Haywood; aliens; “moonshine” still;
martial law proclamation; Constitution of U.S.; censorship; use of federally owned
arms by nonfederal employees.
Principal Correspondents: M. Churchill; Thomas B. Crockett; Gordon Johnston; John
B. Campbell; F. E. Westcott; A. L. Dade; Donald C. Van Buren; F. R. Waltz;
Leonard Wood; J. W. Barker; E. D. Anderson; Newton D. Baker; Charles H.
Brough; Henry Jervey; J. W. Ricketts; Francis P. T. Johnson Sr.; F. C. Harris;
W. F. Hodges; W. S. Mapes; William H. Wood; Paul S. Jones; Manton C.
Mitchell; J. L. Chamberlain; John W. Weeks; J. M. Wainwright; G. Le R. Irwin.
0948
Gary, Indiana (Inspector General, etc.) [1919–1921].
Major Topics: Riots and disorders; use of chemical and high-explosive weapons;
investigation of radicals and radical organizations.
Principal Correspondents: Robert E. Wyllie; E. D. Anderson; H. G. Learnard; Harry L.
King; Amos A. Fries; W. S. Mapes; J. W. Ricketts; Francis P. T. Johnson Sr.;
William H. Wood; Paul S. Jones; Manton C. Mitchell; J. L. Chamberlain.
0972
Gary, Indiana (War and Labor Materials) [1919].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; labor conditions.
Principal Correspondent: Thomas B. Crockett.
0983
Georgia, etc. [1917].
Major Topics: National Guard; African Americans; riots and disorders.
Principal Correspondents: S. D. Sturgis; Tasker Bliss; Nat E. Harris.
0998
Georgia (Bibb City, January 1919).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: Jas. H. E. O’Kelley.
13
Frame No.
Reel 5
[Strikes and Riots cont.]
0001
Hammond, Indiana [1919 and 1921].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; use of federally owned arms by nonfederal
employees.
Principal Correspondents: J. W. Barker; George B. Christian Jr.; Henry Jervey; John
W. Weeks; J. M. Wainwright; G. Le R. Irwin.
0019
Idaho [1918].
Major Topics: Riots and disorders; IWW.
Principal Correspondents: S. T. Ausell; William S. Graves.
0025
Illinois (Peoria; Holt Company Strike [1917]).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: Henry P. McCain.
0028
Knoxville, Tennessee (Streetcar, October–November 1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; riots and disorders; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: A. S. Roberts; M. D. Wheeler; F. G. Potts; E. M. Lewis;
C. A. Bennett; Robert A. Willard; H. L. Kerwin; Wilde Richardson; A. L. Ford;
A. G. Campbell.
0075
Lexington, Kentucky (Race Riots, February 1920).
Major Topics: Martial law proclamation; African Americans; race riots; troop
withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: F. C. Marshall; G. R. F. Cornish; W. R. Scott; George W.
Maddox; Stephen O. Fuqua.
0124
[Boston] Massachusetts [1919].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; military weapons and supplies; riots and
disorders; radical activities; police.
Principal Correspondents: A. Mitchell Palmer; Clarence Edwards; Newton D. Baker;
Calvin Coolidge; Henry F. Long; Andrew J. Peters; F. C. Harris; Henry A.
Frothingham; H. A. Strauss; D. Chauncey Brewer; M. Churchill; E. R. W.
McCabe; J. A. Mulvey; Thomas J. Boynton.
0180
Mexican Border [1916–1924, 1933, and 1937].
Major Topics: U.S. Army regulations; War Department; use of troops; relief work in
natural disasters; alien enemies; riots and disorders; labor disturbances; increase
in armed forces; National Guard.
Principal Correspondents: C. J. Bailey; W. A. Bethel; Henry P. McCain; Newton D.
Baker.
0238
Mississippi (Flood—General) [1918].
Major Topics: Natural disasters; riots and disorders.
Principal Correspondent: Henry P. McCain.
0243
New Jersey [1918].
Major Topic: Use of troops to suppress vice and liquor traffic.
0246
New Orleans [Louisiana] (Dock—Troop Labor, October 1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; use of troops to unload cargo.
Principal Correspondent: Frank T. Hines.
14
Frame No.
0250
New Orleans, Louisiana (Streetcar, July 1920).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; strike settlement.
Principal Correspondents: Raymond Sheldon; W. B. Mahone; Joseph S. Myers;
J. W. Bridwell.
0276
New Orleans, Louisiana (Riot, July 1919; also General).
Major Topics: Race riots; labor disturbances; strike settlement.
Principal Correspondents: Raymond Sheldon; E. M. Lewis; J. W. Bridwell; Joseph S.
Myers; W. B. Mahone.
0296
New York, Glasser File [1918–1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; radical activities; IWW.
Principal Correspondents: H. A. Strauss; M. Churchill; J. J. O’Hare; Frank T. Hines;
Thomas B. Crockett; David W. Swain; Charles J. Kindler; H. C. Williams; J. S.
Fair; R. H. Van Deman; John W. Geary; Newton D. Baker; William C. Redfield.
0331
New York (Garment Strike [1917]).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: Tasker Bliss.
0335
New York, Glasser File (Dock Strike [1919]).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
0341
New York (Longshoremen’s Strike, October–November 1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; radical activities.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas B. Crockett; J. J. O’Hare; Frank T. Hines; J. S.
Fair; Newton D. Baker; H. A. Strauss; William C. Redfield; M. Churchill.
0359
Northwest (Annual Reports, etc.) [1919].
Major Topics: Troops in Butte, Mont.; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: H. F. Hodges; J. F. Morrison.
0367
Northwest (Grain, 1918).
0369
North Carolina (Winston-Salem, Fayetteville, Wilmington) [1918 and 1920].
Major Topic: Race riots.
0389
Ohio (Hamilton; Mosler Safe Company [1918]).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: Charles B. Wheeler.
0392
Ohio (Materials Previously Withheld [1919]).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: Bliss Morton; Edwin B. Lord.
0406
Omaha, Nebraska (IWW, 1917).
Major Topic: IWW activities.
Principal Correspondents: H. G. Learnard; Henry P. McCain.
0414
Omaha, Nebraska (Race Riots, September–October 1919).
Major Topics: Race riots; African Americans; police; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Leonard Wood; Jacob W. S. Wuest; A. L. Dade; O. W.
Neidert; H. T. Lewis; P. A. Barrows; John B. Campbell; Thomas B. Crockett;
P. C. March.
15
Frame No.
0450
Puerto Rico, etc. [1936–1937].
Major Topics: Communist activities; Nationalist Party; parades and demonstrations.
Principal Correspondents: Brien McMahon; A. W. Brown; F. H. Lincoln; E. M.
Almond.
0471
St. Francis, Missouri (Lead Mines, July 1917).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: William Crozier; T. S. Barry; Frederick D. Gardner; Henry
P. McCain; Clinton H. Crane.
0486
St. Maries, Idaho (IWW and Timber, March 1918 and February 1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; labor union membership; labor-management
relations.
Principal Correspondents: William S. Graves; N. P. Marsh; Charles P. Howard;
William H. Urmy; Robert M. McWade.
0497
Savannah, Georgia (Streetcar, December 1918–January 1919).
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: Hugh M. Dorsey; F. C. Harris; Newton D. Baker; J. W.
Bridwell.
0513
Seattle, Washington (General Strike [1918]).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW activities; investigation of radicals;
organization of Soldiers’, Sailors’ and Workmen’s Council.
Principal Correspondents: J. H. Dengel; F. W. Wilson; Rolin G. Watkins; Samuel
Wynne; Driss Benane; Ole Hansen; Ernest Lister; M. A. Mathews; W. A.
Blackwood; J. D. Leitch; J. F. Morrison; E. J. Vennewitz; E. W. Tucker; B. L.
Berry; George E. Smith; Jerome C. Fisher; Charles A. Piez; J. M. Dunn; George
W. Williams.
0609
Seattle, Washington (IWW and Shipyard Strike, 1918–1920), 1 of 2.
Major Topics: IWW activities; labor disturbances; investigation of radicals;
organization of Soldiers’, Sailors’ and Workmen’s Council.
Principal Correspondents: F. S. Foltz; M. E. Saville; M. Churchill; J. H. Dengel; Rolin
G. Watkins; F. G. Knabenshue; Fred Hegge; George Gund; M. W. Fuller Jr.;
Wilfred F. Smith; Thomas B. Crockett; John M. Dunn; F. W. Wilson; Driss
Benane; Samuel Wynne; M. A. Mathews; Ernest Lister; Ole Hansen; Newton D.
Baker; W. A. Blackwood; E. J. Vennewitz; E. W. Tucker; B. L. Berry; George E.
Smith; Jerome C. Fisher; Charles A. Piez; George W. Williams; A. B. Coxe; R. M.
Brambila; Roy F. Hall.
0792
Seattle, Washington (IWW and Shipyard Strike, 1918–1920), 2 of 2.
Major Topics: IWW activities; labor disturbances; investigation of radicals;
organization of Soldiers’, Sailors’ and Workmen’s Council.
Principal Correspondents: F. S. Foltz; M. E. Saville; F. G. Knabenshue; Fred Hegge;
George Gund; J. H. Dengel; M. Churchill; Rolin G. Watkins; M. W. Fuller Jr.;
F. W. Wilson; Wilfred F. Smith; Thomas B. Crockett; John M. Dunn; Samuel
Wynne; W. A. Blackwood; Driss Benane; M. A. Mathews; Ernest Lister; Ole
Hansen; Newton D. Baker; E. J. Vennewitz; E. W. Tucker; B. L. Berry; George E.
Smith; Jerome C. Fisher; Charles A. Piez; George W. Williams; A. B. Coxe; R. M.
Brambila; Roy F. Hall.
16
Frame No.
0971
[Charleston] South Carolina [1919].
Major Topics: Race riots; civil-military relations.
Principal Correspondent: Henry G. Sharpe.
0976
Texas (Ivie Mickle Trial, November 1917).
Major Topic: Murder trial.
Principal Correspondents: W. P. Hobby; Henry P. McCain.
Reel 6
[Strikes and Riots cont.]
0001
Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma (Oil, November 1917).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; civil-military relations.
Principal Correspondents: Edward T. Donnelly; W. P. Hobby; Henry P. McCain; John
W. Ruckman; William Kelly Jr.; Joseph M. Daniels; Newton D. Baker; J. L.
Chamberlain.
0045
Virginia [1918].
Major Topic: Race riots.
Principal Correspondent: C. A. Hedekin.
0047
Washington (IWW and Lumber, etc., Summer 1917), 1 of 2.
Major Topics: IWW activities; labor disturbances; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Newton D. Baker; William C. Pitts;
William M. Ingraham; W. L. Jones; J. T. Kerr; Wall Lippmann; R. H. Van Deman;
W. B. Wilson.
0078
Washington (IWW and Lumber, etc., Summer 1917), 2 of 2.
Major Topics: IWW activities; labor disturbances; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Newton D. Baker; William C. Pitts;
William M. Ingraham; W. L. Jones; J. T. Kerr; Wall Lippmann; R. H. Van Deman;
W. B. Wilson.
0109
Washington (Summer 1917).
Major Topics: Hours of labor; presidential powers; lumber industry and products;
civil-military relations; federal protection of strategic locations; increase in
Ordnance Department; labor disturbances; aircraft and aerospace industry; IWW
activities; labor union membership; labor-management relations; Espionage Act
amendment.
Principal Correspondents: J. W. McConaughy; W. B. Wilson; Felix Frankfurter; Henry
P. McCain; William Cruikshank; F. S. Lawson; Morris Sheppard; E. M. Weaver;
William Crozier; Joseph E. Kuhn; Edward J. Nally; W. M. Black; Newton D.
Baker; Robert C. Davis; Jacob M. Dickinson; H. L. Scott; Tasker Bliss; F. W. Olin;
E. B. Babbitt; E. H. Crowder; John J. Pershing; Frank W. Cotterill; Samuel L.
Fuller; E. E. Carpenter; Frank Morrison; Samuel Gompers; George E. Oller;
William Philips; Miles Poindexter; A. H. Quarles; Hugh L. Kerwin; Stanley King;
C. N. McArthur; G. W. Fenwick; A. F. Pillsbury; J. G. Brown; B. N. Sawyer; J. P.
Keating; E. G. Griggs; Gordon C. Corbaley; Watson Eastman; Alex Polson;
Charles Perry Taylor; Carleton Parker; Henry Suzzallo; James A. Duncan;
Woodrow Wilson; Hugh Frayne; William H. Urmy; Robert M. McWade; John Lord
O’Brian; Alfred Bettman.
17
Frame No.
0295
Washington (General and Lumber, 1917–1919).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW activities; organization of Soldiers’, Sailors’
and Workmen’s Council; investigation of radicals.
Principal Correspondents: F. G. Knabenshue; F. W. Wilson; Fred Hegge; George
Gund; M. Churchill; J. H. Dengel; Rolin G. Watkins; M. W. Fuller Jr.; Wilfred F.
Smith; Thomas B. Crockett; John M. Dunn; F. S. Foltz; M. E. Saville; R. M.
Brambila.
0370
Washington, Miscellaneous, 1920 etc. (Previously Withheld Materials) [1919–1920
and 1937–1938].
Major Topics: IWW activities; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: J. Edgar Hoover; Harold Nathan; Frank Burke; Bliss
Morton.
0398
Washington (Previously Withheld Materials) [1917].
Major Topic: IWW activities.
0404
Washington (Montesano) [1920].
Major Topic: IWW.
Principal Correspondent: Roy F. Hall.
0412
Washington, D.C. (1917, 1919).
Major Topics: Race riots; Justice Department investigation of African Americans.
Principal Correspondents: C. J. Harvey; Newton D. Baker; Henry G. Sebastian; G. C.
Bernhardt; Ralph Hayes; Joseph P. Trent; Henry Jervey.
0423
Wyoming [1919].
Major Topic: Crime and criminals.
[Background Material]
0427
Alien Enemy Proclamation [1917–1918].
Major Topic: Restrictions on alien enemies.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Woodrow Wilson; William Kelly Jr.
0436
Army, Attitude of [1919].
Major Topics: Radical organizations; American Protective League.
Principal Correspondent: Thomas B. Crockett.
0438
Army and IWW [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; lumber industry and products;
aircraft and aerospace industry; labor disturbances; troop withdrawal; IWW
activities; German subversive activities; United Kingdom; mines and mineral
resources.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Edward T. Donnelly; W. L. Jones; Bert
McManus; J. T. Kerr; R. H. Van Deman; W. B. Wilson; Ernest Lister; Newton D.
Baker; A. R. Hilen; F. H. Furey; William M. Ingraham; William C. Fitts; Tasker
Bliss; T. J. Newhill; W. A. Robinson; Ernest Livingston; C. E. Deutler; J. C. H.
Reynolds; Wall Lippmann; James Withycomber; Cecil Spring Rice.
0518
British Strike Plans [1920].
Major Topics: United Kingdom; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: John M. Dunn; Clifford Penny.
18
Frame No.
0531
Chemicals and Explosives, Use of [1919 and 1921].
Major Topics: Riots and disorders; use of chemical and high-explosive weapons.
Principal Correspondents: Robert E. Wyllie; H. G. Learnard; Harry L. King.
0536
Coal (Stearns Papers) [1919–1922].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; use of chemical and high-explosive weapons; coal
and coal mining; troop withdrawal; West Virginia; U.S. Fuel Administration.
Principal Correspondents: Amos A. Fries; G. W. Read; H. B. Fiske; Henry Jervey;
J. G. Harbord; Philip Murray; Henry D. Hatfield; James T. Williams Jr.; John W.
Weeks; Stanley H. Ford; Thomas H. Slavens; H. B. Day; H. A. Garfield; Benedict
Crowell; DeR. C. Cabell; W. D. Brennan; F. E. Warren; Thomas E. Kilby; B. F.
Delamater Jr.; J. A. White; Henry G. Sharpe; Peyton C. March.
0651
Cross-references and Sources [1919–1932].
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
0692
Duplicates [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW activities; lumber industry and products;
mines and mineral resources; labor conditions; Anaconda Copper Mining
Company labor contract; earnings; hours of labor; “rustling card” system
(employment cards sometimes used for blacklisting miners); Representative
Jeannette Rankin; labor unions.
Principal Correspondents: H. L. Myers; William C. Fitts; W. B. Wilson; W. H.
Rodgers; B. M. Baruch; Con. [Cornelius] F. Kelly; Newton D. Baker; Jeannette
Rankin; W. B. Wilson; G. Y. Harry; Hywel Davies; Felix Frankfurter; Thomas J.
Chope; Thomas Barker.
0838
Federal Buildings, Banks, Courts, etc. [1917–1918 and 1921].
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; troop withdrawal.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; C. S. Hamlin; J. G. Harbord; John W.
Weeks; Harry L. King; Newton D. Baker; J. C. Koons.
0849
IWW (West) [1917–1918 and 1937].
Major Topics: IWW activities; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: William M. Cruikshank; Henry P. McCain; S. V. Stewart;
Clinton H. Crane; Ernest Lister; Newton D. Baker.
0904
Lumber [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Troop withdrawal; federal protection of strategic locations; IWW
activities; labor disturbances; lumber industry and products; hours of labor.
Principal Correspondents: F. G. Crowell; J. W. McConaughy; W. B. Wilson.
Reel 7
[Background Material cont.]
0001
Lumber (1917–1918).
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; lumber industry and products; hours of labor;
federal protection of strategic locations.
Principal Correspondents: J. W. McConaughy; Henry Suzzallo; Felix Frankfurter;
W. B. Wilson; Newton D. Baker; P. H. Spangenberg; C. O. Young; Leonard
Wood; E. H. Crowder; C. T. Clayton; C. Covert.
19
Frame No.
0066
Lumber (Previously Withheld Materials) [1917].
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; IWW activities.
Principal Correspondents: William M. Cruikshank; Henry P. McCain; H. L. Scott.
0076
Military Censorship [1918].
Major Topic: Censorship.
Principal Correspondent: M. Churchill.
0085
Military and Utility Guards [1917–1919].
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; National Guard.
Principal Correspondents: Tasker Bliss; Simon Bamberger; James M. Cox; R. G.
Pleasant; Henry P. McCain; J. T. Dean; William Crozier; William S. Graves; S. D.
Sturgis; William Kelly Jr.; R. K. Cravens; Henry Jervey; L. S. Chappelear; E. D.
Anderson; T. H. Barry.
0113
Miscellaneous, 1 of 4 [1917–1922].
Major Topics: Troop withdrawal; labor disturbances; use of troops to suppress vice
and liquor traffic; compulsory military service; federal protection of strategic
locations; prohibition.
Principal Correspondents: William M. Ingraham; William Kelly Jr.; Neal C. Johnson;
H. O. S. Heistand; James M. Cox; Frank T. Hines; Charles J. Kindler; Charles L.
Whitman; Tasker Bliss; J. A. A. Burnquist; Ben D. Brickhouse; H. L. Kerwin; J. G.
Harbord; John W. Weeks; Harry L. King; J. C. Ashburn; C. C. Williams; Newton
D. Baker; J. C. Koons; William C. Sproul; Warren G. Harding; G. M. Holley;
Sidney J. Catts; Henry P. McCain.
0188
Miscellaneous, 2 of 4 [1917–1919 and 1928].
Major Topics: Communist activities; African Americans; riots and disorders;
immigration.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Scott Israel; Carroll M. Counts; Tasker Bliss; J. A.
Hull.
0201
Miscellaneous, 3 of 4 [1917–1922].
Major Topics: Use of troops to suppress vice and liquor traffic; federal protection of
strategic locations; labor disturbances; compulsory military service; Prohibition.
Principal Correspondents: William M. Ingraham; C. M. Thiele; William Kelly Jr.; Neal
C. Johnson; H. O. S. Heistand; James M. Cox; G. M. Holley; Sidney J. Catts;
Newton D. Baker; Frank T. Hines; Charles J. Kindler; Charles L. Whitman;
Tasker Bliss; Henry P. McCain; J. A. A. Burnquist; Ben D. Brickhouse; H. L.
Kerwin; J. G. Harbord; John W. Weeks; Harry L. King; C. C. Williams; J. C.
Ashburn; J. C. Koons; William C. Sproul; Warren G. Harding; John C. Roberts.
0275
Miscellaneous, 4 of 4 [1917–1921].
Major Topics: Compulsory military service; labor disturbances; National Guard;
protection of government supplies.
Principal Correspondents: Newton D. Baker; L. D. Greene; Henry P. McCain.
0293
Miscellaneous Topic File [1917–1922].
Major Topics: Propaganda and military morale; labor disturbances; riots and
disorders; United Kingdom; federal protection of strategic locations; troop
withdrawal; National Guard.
Principal Correspondents: John M. Dunn; Henry A. Frothingham; C. A. Hedekin;
Newton D. Baker; John W. Weeks; William Weigel; Henry P. McCain; Frank T.
Hines; T. C. Cook; W. M. Wright; John Millis; W. D. Connor; W. S. McNair;
20
Frame No.
H. C. Williams; W. G. Haan; Clifford Penny; J. A. Mulvey; Raymond Sheldon; L.
D. Greene; E. H. Humphrey; H. C. Williams; M. Churchill.
0410
Miscellaneous Working Papers [1919].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW activities.
0416
Negroes (1917–1924).
Major Topics: National Urban League; radicalism among African Americans; race
riots; IWW; William Trotter; Marcus Garvey; Justice Department.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas B. Crockett; M. Churchill; J. E. Cutler; Carroll M.
Counts; H. A. Strauss; Henry G. Sebastian; C. J. Harvey.
0470
Radical Activities (Previously Withheld Materials) [1919].
Major Topics: IWW; investigation of radicals and radical organizations; Marine
Transport Workers.
0485
Radical Activities (Miscellaneous), 1 of 2 [1918–1920].
Major Topics: Investigation of radicals and radical organizations; Marine Transport
Workers; IWW; aliens; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: David W. Swain; John W. Geary; M. Churchill; R. H. Van
Deman; H. A. Strauss.
0515
Radical Activities (Miscellaneous), 2 of 2 [1918–1920].
Major Topics: Marine Transport Workers; investigation of radicals and radical
organizations; IWW; labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondents: R. H. Van Deman; M. Churchill; John W. Geary; David W.
Swain; H. A. Strauss; Thomas B. Crockett.
0532
Retail Prices, 1 of 4 [1890–1922 and 1935–1938].
Major Topics: Cost of living; statistical data on families in Butte, Mont.; retail prices;
earnings.
0686
Retail Prices, 2 of 4 [1890–1921].
Major Topics: Retail prices; wholesale prices.
Reel 8
[Background Material cont.]
0002
Retail Prices, 2 of 4 cont. [1913–1920].
Major Topic: Retail prices.
0129
Retail Prices, 3 of 4 [1929–1937].
Major Topics: Cost of living; Bureau of Labor Statistics and Labor Department
publications; retail prices.
0230
Retail Prices, 4 of 4 [1913–1919].
Major Topic: Retail prices.
0511
Steel Strike [1920].
0513
Summary Papers [1920].
Major Topics: Investigations of radicals and radical organizations; IWW activities;
labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: William Weigel.
21
Frame No.
0526
War Plans, White, 1 of 2 [1920–1921].
Major Topics: Federal emergency plans for domestic disturbances; radical
propaganda; investigations of radicals and radical organizations; censorship.
Principal Correspondents: George M. Russell; A. B. Coxe; E. F. McCarron; F. D.
Griffith Jr.; W. G. Haan; Frank C. Burnett.
0536
War Plans, White, 2 of 2 [1918–1921].
Major Topics: Federal emergency plans for domestic disturbances; investigations of
radicals and radical organizations; censorship; radical propaganda; National
Guard.
Principal Correspondents: W. G. Haan; Newton D. Baker; George M. Russell;
William M. Cruikshank; Frank C. Burnett; M. Churchill; David C. Shanks;
A. Cronkhite; John M. Dunn; A. B. Coxe; C. M. Dowell; Logan N. Rock; E. F.
McCarron; F. D. Griffith Jr.; W. D. Connor.
0584
War Plans, White (Miscellaneous Correspondence) [1921].
Major Topic: Federal emergency plans for domestic disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: W. G. Haan.
0587
Utilities (General) [1917–1919].
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; protection of government
supplies.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; Newton D. Baker; Tasker Bliss; A. C.
Stanley; Charles L. Whitman; William Crozier; William S. Graves; J. A. A.
Burnquist; J. B. Wilson; Henry Jervey; E. D. Anderson; Leonard Wood; C. M.
Thiele.
0628
Utilities [1917].
Major Topic: Federal protection of strategic locations.
Principal Correspondents: Tasker Bliss; Henry P. McCain.
0636
Utilities (Specific) [1917–1919].
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; National Guard.
Principal Correspondents: L. S. Chappelear; J. F. Morrison; T. H. Barry; William
Crozier; C. R. Edwards; Henry P. McCain; John C. Roberts; William M.
Ingraham; J. C. Ashburn; C. C. Williams; Edward T. Donnelly; J. A. A. Burnquist;
James M. Cox; R. G. Pleasant; Simon Bamberger; J. T. Dean.
[Chronological Files]
0699
1917.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; federal protection of strategic locations;
National Guard; troop withdrawal; detention of aliens; riots and disorders; military
action restricted to protection of life and property; African Americans; restrictions
on alien enemies.
Principal Correspondents: John C. Greenway; Tasker Bliss; Newton D. Baker; Henry
P. McCain; F. D. Gardner; J. T. Dean; T. H. Barry; H. E. Mann; William Crozier;
William C. Fitts; W. K. Lindsey; William M. Ingraham; W. B. Wilson; H. O. S.
Heistand; James M. Cox; Edward T. Donnelly; William S. Graves; W. L. Jones;
J. T. Kerr; J. E. Lewis; John C. Walker Jr.; C. J. Harvey; A. B. Fox; Tom C. Rye;
Hugh M. Foster; A. M. Johnson Jr.; Thomas E. Campbell; B. M. Baruch; A. T.
Thomson; Walter Douglas; George M. Brown; J. R. Mathews; Peyton T. Karr;
Wall Lippmann; Ben D. Brickhouse; H. L. Kerwin; James Withycomber; S. D.
Sturgis; Tom Armer; W. P. Hobby; J. A. A. Burnquist; H. G. Learnard; William
22
Frame No.
Kelly Jr.; Woodrow Wilson; R. H. Van Deman; John W. Ruckman; W. B. Wilson;
W. M. Riddle.
Reel 9
[Chronological Files cont.]
0001
1918.
Major Topics: Federal protection of strategic locations; labor disturbances; quartering
of troops at mining companies’ expense; troop withdrawal; IWW activities;
compulsory military service; labor unions; censorship; arrests of IWW leaders;
military detention and arrest; investigations of radicals and radical organizations;
use of troops to suppress vice and liquor traffic; race riots; Marine Transport
Workers.
Principal Correspondents: Henry P. McCain; R. K. Cravens; Joseph M. Daniels;
Frank Brown; Newton D. Baker; George W. P. Hunt; John W. Ruckman; G. H.
Wende; B. M. Baruch; W. B. Wilson; Lutz Wahl; J. L. Chamberlain; M. E. Saville;
Eugene H. Mitchell; William S. Graves; Arthur Murray; F. G. Knabenshue; Henry
Jervey; M. Churchill; John Lord O’Brian; William Kelly Jr.; Neal C. Johnson; Fred
Hegge; J. F. Morrison; L. S. Chappelear; R. L. Barnes; Benjamin H. Hardaway;
J. H. Dengel; George Gund; E. F. Kinkead; Will H. Germer; I. D. Reedy; John G.
Crowley; J. A. Blankenship; Rolin G. Watkins; DeR. C. Cabell; A. B. Bielaski;
G. Aertsen Jr.; G. L. Stancliff; H. S. Dickey; John W. Heavey; M. W. Fuller Jr.;
J. C. Koons; Arthur Simon; I. C. Welborn; C. C. Williams; F. W. Wilson; E. D.
Anderson; R. H. Van Deman; Joseph S. Myers; C. A. Hedekin; J. A. A. Burnquist;
James M. Cox; R. G. Pleasant; James Parker; Charles L. Whitman; G. R.
McCain; Frederick D. Gardner; Clinton H. Crane; Simon Bamberger; Hugh M.
Dorsey.
0289
1919.
Major Topics: IWW activities; communism; labor disturbances; labor unions; Marine
Transport Workers; organization of Soldiers’, Sailors’ and Workmen’s Council;
Joe Kennedy; investigations of radicals and radical organizations; African
Americans; race riots; William Trotter; Marcus Garvey; Justice Department;
police; riots and disorders; National Urban League; troop withdrawal; use of
troops to unload cargo; use of chemical and high-explosive weapons.
Principal Correspondents: F. W. Wilson; John W. Geary; Wilfred F. Smith; David W.
Swain; Thomas B. Crockett; H. M. Dorsey; John M. Dunn; Leon C. Booker;
DeR. C. Cabell; Newton D. Baker; Samuel Wynne; W. A. Blackwood; Driss
Benane; Ernest Lister; Ole Hansen; M. A. Mathews; E. J. Vennewitz; William B.
Osgood Field; J. T. Walsh; E. P. Marsh; Jerome C. Fisher; Charles P. Howard;
Will H. Germer; William H. Urmy; Henry Jervey; H. L. Kerwin; J. W. Bridwell;
T. H. Barry; F. C. Harris; H. A. Strauss; Ralph Hayes; G. C. Barnhardt; Henry G.
Sebastian; M. Churchill; J. E. Cutler; Henry A. Frothingham; Calvin Coolidge;
A. Mitchell Palmer; P. C. March; D. Chauncey Brewer; John B. Schoeffel;
Charles H. Brough; John B. Campbell; Jacob W. S. Wuest; R. C. Langdon;
Leonard Wood; Robert C. Poage; Eugene E. Barton; H. L. Finley; Edward P.
Passailaigue; O. W. Neidert; J. J. O’Hare; H. C. White; Frank T. Hines; J. S. Fair;
M. D. Wheeler; F. G. Potts; William C. Redfield; Charles J. Kindler; C. A. Bennett;
E. M. Lewis; Robert A. Willard; Robert E. Wyllie; A. B. Coxe; Wilde Richardson;
23
Frame No.
A. L. Ford; R. M. Brambila; E. R. W. McCabe; Henry G. Sharpe; W. H. Sullivan;
J. A. Shipton; R. G. Pleasant.
0651
1920.
Major Topics: Investigations of radicals and radical organizations; IWW activities;
African Americans; race riots; troop withdrawal; United Kingdom; labor unions;
Robert L. Hill; labor disturbances; radical newspaper Butte Daily Bulletin;
prohibition; alcohol imports.
Principal Correspondents: E. H. Humphrey; Henry A. Frothingham; J. A. Mulvey;
G. L. Morrow; Robert C. Poage; M. D. Wheeler; J. T. Dickman; F. C. Harris;
W. R. Scott; G. R. F. Cornish; F. C. Marshall; George W. Maddox; Stephen O.
Fuqua; Roy F. Hall; M. Churchill; H. A. Strauss; S. V. Stewart; A. S. Peake;
Herman Hall; A. D. Chaffin; H. F. Hodges; John D. Ryan; Newton D. Baker; G. M.
Holley; Edward B. Jackson; A. B. Coxe; N. H. Lamar; Raymond Sheldon; Herbert
G. Esden; W. B. Mahone; Joseph S. Myers; W. C. DeWare; Sidney J. Catts;
A. Boettcher; George M. Russell; John M. Dunn; William Weigel; W. G. Haan;
J. W. Bridwell; Clifford Penny; Henry Jervey; E. F. McCarron; Frank C. Burnett.
0828
1921.
Major Topics: IWW; African Americans; National Guard; labor disturbances; federal
protection of strategic locations.
Principal Correspondents: Roger Williams Jr.; W. G. Haan; T. C. Cook; W. M. Wright;
Joe T. Robinson; Thomas McRea; L. D. Greene; W. S. McNair; J. G. Harbord;
John W. Weeks; Harry L. King; F. D. Griffith Jr.
0850
1922.
Major Topics: Federal emergency plans for domestic disturbances; federal protection
of strategic locations.
Principal Correspondents: John Millis; W. D. Connor; William C. Sproul; Warren G.
Harding.
0857
1925.
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: Joseph E. Ransdell.
0860
1932.
Major Topic: Labor disturbances.
Principal Correspondent: John W. Weeks.
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers]
0863
Miscellaneous Memorandums [1937–1940].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; FBI; presidential powers; IWW.
Principal Correspondents: Lawrence M. C. Smith; Abraham Glasser.
0882
Arizona (Bisbee Deportation) [1917].
Major Topics: Deportations; IWW; labor disturbances.
0901
Arizona Copper Strikes [1917].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; deportations; troop withdrawal.
24
Frame No.
Reel 10
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers cont.]
0001
Arizona (Duplicates [Drafts]) [1917–1918].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; deportations; troop withdrawal.
0116
Butte Miners’ Strikes, 1 of 2 [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; copper and copper industry; IWW; labor unions;
earnings; “rustling card” system (employment cards sometimes used for
blacklisting miners); lynching of IWW leader Frank Little; National Guard;
Anaconda Copper Mining Company.
0247
Butte Miners’ Strikes, 2 of 2 [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; military detention and arrest; compulsory
military service; troop withdrawal; earnings; FBI reports; labor unions.
0392
Butte Miners’ Strikes (Handwritten Draft), 1 of 4 [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Labor unions; IWW; labor disturbances; military detention and arrest;
compulsory military service; earnings; FBI reports.
0508
Butte Miners’ Strikes (Handwritten Draft), 2 of 4 [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; earnings; IWW; FBI reports.
0583
Butte Miners’ Strikes (Handwritten Draft), 3 of 4 [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; arrests; civil-military relations; Anaconda
Copper Mining Company; lynching of IWW leader Frank Little; National Guard.
0657
Butte Miners’ Strikes (Handwritten Draft), 4 of 4 [1917–1920].
Major Topics: IWW; labor disturbances; labor unions; “rustling card” system
(employment cards sometimes used for blacklisting miners); earnings.
0710
Introduction.
Major Topics: National Guard; presidential powers; labor disturbances; federal
emergency plans for domestic disturbances; Woodrow Wilson.
0838
Lumber, 1 of 2 [1917].
Major Topics: Lumber industry and products; labor unions; labor disturbances; IWW;
labor conditions; hours of labor; AFL; labor-management relations.
0922
Lumber, 2 of 2 [1917].
Major Topics: IWW; labor disturbances; lumber industry and products; hours of labor;
labor unions; National Guard.
Reel 11
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers cont.]
0001
Lumber (Duplicates) [1917].
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; lumber industry and products; IWW; hours of
labor; labor unions.
0065
Miscellaneous Drafts and Working Papers, 1 of 3.
Major Topics: Labor unions; IWW; labor disturbances; Justice Department; labormanagement relations; lumber industry and products; hours of labor.
25
Frame No.
0172
Miscellaneous Drafts and Working Papers, 2 of 3.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; IWW; copper and copper industry; Sabotage Act;
subversive activities; War Department; troop withdrawal.
0334
Miscellaneous Drafts and Working Papers, 3 of 3.
Major Topics: War Department; copper and copper industry; troop withdrawal; labor
disturbances; IWW; deportations.
0436
Steel Strike [1919].
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; labor conditions; labor unions; Samuel
Gompers; labor disturbances; Woodrow Wilson; earnings.
0597
Steel Strike [1919] (Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers), 1 of 4.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; labor unions; Woodrow Wilson; Samuel Gompers;
iron and steel industry; martial law; Justice Department.
0747
Steel Strike [1919] (Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers), 2 of 4.
Major Topics: Labor unions; iron and steel industry; labor-management relations;
labor disturbances; hours of labor; earnings.
0866
Steel Strike [1919] (Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers), 3 of 4.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; labor unions; iron and steel industry; Justice
Department; IWW; involvement of radicals; martial law.
Reel 12
[Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers cont.]
0001
Steel Strike [1919] (Handwritten Drafts and Working Papers), 4 of 4.
Major Topics: Martial law; labor disturbances; involvement of radicals; IWW; William
D. Haywood; troop withdrawal.
0148
World War I [1917–1918].
Major Topics: National Guard; labor disturbances; War Department; Justice
Department; federal protection of strategic locations; alien enemies.
0225
Materials Previously Withheld [1917–1920].
Major Topics: Marine Transport Workers; IWW activities; labor unions; investigation
of radicals and radical organizations; federal emergency plans for domestic
disturbances.
[Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Decisions]
0259
Table of Cases—Decisions on Federal Rules of Civil Procedure [1938–1939].
0295
Cumulative Alphabetical List of Cases—Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
0317
Rule 1—Scope of Rules.
Major Topics: Interpretation; burden of proof; amount in controversy.
0330
Rule 2—One Form of Action.
Major Topics: Action at law versus action in equity; remedies; statutes of limitation.
0347
Rule 3—Commencement of Action.
Major Topic: Statutes of limitation.
26
Frame No.
0353
Rule 4—Process.
Major Topic: Service of process.
0386
Rule 5—Service and Filing of Pleadings and Other Papers.
Major Topic: Service of process.
0393
Rule 6—Time.
Major Topic: Timing of motions.
0407
Rule 7—Pleadings Allowed; Form of Motions.
Major Topics: Form of motions; treatment of demurrer as motion to dismiss or motion
for judgment on the pleadings.
0437
Rule 8—General Rules of Pleading.
Major Topics: Claims for relief; defenses; inconsistent pleadings.
0522
Rule 9—Pleading of Special Matters.
Major Topics: Capacity to sue; fraud.
0532
Rule 10—Forms of Pleading.
Major Topics: Names of parties; exhibits.
0541
Rule 11—Signing of Pleadings.
Major Topic: Attorney signature.
0544
Rule 12—Defenses and Objections; When and How Presented—by Pleading or
Motion; Motion for Judgment on Pleadings.
Major Topics: Defenses; objections; treatment of demurrer as motion to dismiss;
motion for judgment on the pleadings; preliminary hearings;
0631
Rule 12—Defense and Objections; When and How Presented—by Pleading or
Motion; Motion for Judgment on Pleadings cont.
Major Topics: Motion for more definite statement or for bill of particulars; motion to
strike; consolidation of motions; waiver of defenses.
0783
Rule 13—Counterclaim and Cross-Claim.
Major Topics: Compulsory counterclaims; permissive counterclaims; additional
parties.
0810
Rule 14—Third Party Practice.
Major Topic: When defendant may bring in third party.
0883
Rule 15—Amended and Supplemental Pleadings.
Major Topic: Amendment of pleadings.
0914
Rule 16—Pre-Trial Procedure; Formulating Issues.
Major Topic: Pretrial proceedings.
0923
Rule 17—Parties Plaintiff and Defendant; Capacity.
Major Topics: Real party in interest; capacity to sue or be sued; infants or
incompetent persons.
0940
Rule 18—Joinder of Claims and Remedies.
Major Topics: Joinder of claims; joinder of remedies.
0958
Rule 19—Necessary Joinder of Parties.
Major Topics: Necessary joinder; effect of failure to join.
27
Frame No.
0973
Rule 20—Permissive Joinder of Parties.
Major Topic: Permissive joinder.
0990
Rule 21—Misjoinder and Non-Joinder of Parties.
Major Topics: Improper joinder; nonjoinder.
Reel 13
[Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Decisions cont.]
0001
Rule 22—Interpleader.
0011
Rule 23—Class Actions.
Major Topics: Representation; secondary action by shareholders; dismissal.
0023
Rule 24—Intervention.
Major Topics: Intervention of right; permissive intervention; procedure.
0057
Rule 25—Substitution of Parties.
Major Topic: Public officers.
0060
Rule 26—Depositions Pending Actions.
Major Topics: When depositions may be taken; scope of examination; use of
depositions.
0148
Rule 27—Depositions before Action or Pending Appeal.
Major Topic: Depositions.
0151
Rule 28—Persons before Whom Depositions May Be Taken.
Major Topics: Depositions; disqualification of deposition-taker for interest.
0157
Rule 29—Stipulation Regarding the Taking of Depositions.
Major Topic: Waiver of disqualification.
0160
Rule 30—Depositions upon Oral Examination.
Major Topics: Notice of examination; orders for protection of parties and deponents;
record of examination; motion to terminate or limit examination.
0208
Rule 31—Depositions of Witnesses upon Written Interrogatories.
Major Topics: Orders for protection of parties and deponents; serving interrogatories.
0212
Rule 32—Effect of Errors and Irregularities in Depositions.
0214
Rule 33—Interrogatories to Parties.
Major Topic: Interrogatories to parties.
0265
Rule 34—Discovery and Production of Documents and Things for Inspection,
Copying, or Photographing.
Major Topics: Discovery; production.
0319
Rule 35—Physical and Mental Examinations of Persons.
Major Topics: Order for examination; report of findings.
0330
Rule 36—Admission of Facts and of Genuineness of Documents.
Major Topic: Request for admission.
28
Frame No.
0359
Rule 37—Refusal to Make Discovery: Consequences.
Major Topics: Failure of party to attend or serve answers; failure to comply with
order.
0369
Rule 38—Jury Trial of Right.
Major Topics: Right to jury trial; waiver.
0384
Rule 39—Trial by Jury or by the Court.
Major Topics: Trial by jury; trial by the court.
0389
Rule 41—Dismissal of Actions.
Major Topics: Voluntary dismissal; involuntary dismissal; costs of previously
dismissed action; dismissal of counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim.
0433
Rule 42—Consolidated; Separate Trials.
Major Topics: Separate trials; consolidation.
0446
Rule 43—Evidence.
Major Topics: Form and admissibility of evidence; record of excluded evidence.
0465
Rule 45—Subpoena.
Major Topics: Subpoena for depositions; service; subpoena for production of
documentary evidence; contempt.
0494
Rule 46—Exceptions Unnecessary.
0496
Rule 49—Special Verdicts and Interrogatories.
Major Topic: Special verdicts.
0501
Rule 50—Motion for a Directed Verdict.
Major Topics: When motion made; reservation of decision on motion.
0519
Rule 52—Findings by the Court.
Major Topic: Effect of findings by the court.
0545
Rule 53—Masters.
Major Topics: Appointment and compensation; referral of matters; powers; report.
0558
Rule 54—Judgments; Costs.
Major Topics: Demand for judgment; costs; form.
0583
Rule 55—Default.
Major Topics: Entry of default; judgment by the court.
0588
Rule 56—Summary Judgment.
Major Topics: Summary judgment for claimant; summary judgment for defendant;
motion and proceedings thereon; case not fully adjudicated.
0680
Rule 57—Declaratory Judgment.
Major Topic: Declaratory judgments.
0695
Rule 58—Entry of Judgment.
0697
Rule 59—New Trials.
Major Topics: Grounds for new trial; new trial on initiative of court; time for motion;
0709
Rule 60—Relief from Judgment or Order.
Major Topic: Grounds for relief from judgment.
29
Frame No.
0712
Rule 61—Harmless Error.
0716
Rule 62—Stay of Proceedings to Enforce a Judgment.
Major Topic: Automatic stay.
0719
Rule 65—Injunctions.
0723
Rule 66—Receivers.
0727
Rule 69—Execution.
0730
Rule 73—Appeal to a Circuit Court of Appeals.
Major Topics: Supersedeas bonds; how appeal is taken; notice of appeal; docketing
and record on appeal.
0763
Rule 74—Joint or Several Appeals; Summons and Severance Abolished.
0771
Rule 75—Record on Appeal to a Circuit Court of Appeals.
Major Topics: Power of court to correct record; form of testimony; printing;
abbreviation of record.
0780
Rule 77—District Courts and Clerks.
Major Topics: Trials and hearings; orders in chambers.
0783
Rule 79—Books Kept by the Clerk and Entries Therein.
Major Topic: Civil docket.
0785
Rule 80—Stenographer; Stenographic Report or Transcript as Evidence.
0787
Rule 81—Applicability in General.
Major Topics: Scire facias and mandamus; removed actions; effective date of FRCP.
0830
Rule 82—Jurisdiction and Venue Unaffected.
0836
Rule 83—Rules by District Courts.
Major Topics: District court rules; effective date of FRCP.
0851
Rule 84—Forms.
0855
Rule 86—Effective Date.
Major Topic: Effective date of FRCP.
[Journals and Law Reviews]
0953
American Bar Association Journal.
Major Topics: Supreme Court; Constitution of U.S.; representative government; wars
and military conflicts; habeas corpus; martial law; labor disturbances.
0966
Albany Law Journal.
Major Topics: Civil liberties; demonstrations and protests; Constitution of U.S.;
presidential powers; riots and disorders; military law; habeas corpus; martial law.
Reel 14
[Journals and Law Reviews cont.]
0001
American Historical Association Annual Report.
Major Topics: Wars and military conflicts, U.S.; military law; Constitution of U.S.;
martial law; habeas corpus; presidential powers; civil-military relations.
30
Frame No.
0035
American Historical Review.
Major Topics: Habeas corpus; United Kingdom.
0046
American Jurist.
Major Topic: Riots and disorders.
0051
American Law Review.
Major Topics: Habeas corpus; military law; presidential powers; executive
regulations; Constitution of U.S.; Supreme Court; subversive activities; enemy
aliens; espionage.
0227
American Journal of International Law.
Major Topics: Military law; Constitution of U.S.; presidential powers; wars and military
conflicts.
0252
American Law Magazine.
Major Topics: Riots and disorders; Constitution of U.S.
0271
American Law Register.
Major Topics: Martial law; United Kingdom; Constitution of U.S.; presidential powers;
habeas corpus; labor disturbances; military law.
0330
American Legal News.
Major Topics: Military law; espionage.
0333
American Political Science Review.
Major Topics: Martial law; subversive activities; habeas corpus; Constitution of U.S.
0360
Boston University Law Review.
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; wars and military conflicts; presidential powers.
0386
Calcutta Law Journal.
Major Topics: Martial law; military law.
0396
California Law Review.
Major Topics: Presidential powers; Constitution of U.S.; martial law; habeas corpus;
wars and military conflicts; civil-military relations; military law.
0484
Cambridge Law Journal.
Major Topics: Police; demonstrations and protests.
0495
Canadian Law Times.
Major Topics: Military law; riots and disorders; civil liberties; martial law.
0523
Cape Law Journal.
Major Topic: Martial law.
0555
Case and Comment.
Major Topics: Military law; martial law; labor disturbances; civil liberties; Constitution
of U.S.; wars and military conflicts; presidential powers.
0594
Central Law Review.
Major Topics: Constitution of U.S.; right to bear arms; National Guard.
0627
Chambers’ Journal.
Major Topic: Martial law.
0632
Chicago Legal News.
Major Topics: Martial law; labor disturbances; Constitution of U.S.
31
Frame No.
0641
Columbia Law Review.
Major Topics: Martial law; habeas corpus; wars and military conflicts; labor
disturbances.
0670
Constitutional Review.
Major Topics: Martial law; Constitution of U.S.; presidential powers; wars and military
conflicts.
0681
Contemporary Review.
Major Topic: Martial law.
0696
Cornell Law Quarterly.
Major Topics: Martial law; United Kingdom; Constitution of U.S.
0712
Cornhill Magazine.
Major Topics: Martial law; military law.
0719
Detroit Law Review.
Major Topics: Martial law; Constitution of U.S.
0726
George Washington Law Review.
Major Topics: Martial law; military law; labor disturbances.
0738
Georgetown Law Journal.
Major Topics: Presidential powers; military law; martial law.
0775
Green Bag.
Major Topic: Riots and disorders.
0782
Harvard Law Review.
Major Topics: Wars and military conflicts; freedom of speech; Constitution of U.S.;
subversive activities.
0835
Illinois Law Review.
Major Topics: Habeas corpus; United Kingdom; martial law; Constitution of U.S.;
Supreme Court; military law; freedom of speech; subversive activities; labor
disturbances.
0927
International Review.
Major Topics: Representative government; Constitution of U.S.; federal-state
relations.
0959
Iowa Law Review.
Major Topic: Martial law.
0970
Irish Law Times.
Major Topics: Unlawful assembly; riots and disorders.
Reel 15
[Journals and Law Reviews cont.]
0001
Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, 1 of 2.
Major Topics: Labor disturbances; martial law; Constitution of U.S.; habeas corpus;
presidential powers; wars and military conflicts; military law; civil-military
relations.
32
Frame No.
0110
Journal of the American Institute of Criminal Law and Criminology, 2 of 2.
Major Topics: National Guard; wars and military conflicts; Constitution of U.S.;
martial law; civil-military relations; labor disturbances; military law.
0204
Journal of the Military Service Institution of the U.S.
Major Topics: Riots and disorders; National Guard; martial law; Constitution of U.S.;
civil-military relations.
0305
Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation.
Major Topics: Martial law; military law.
[Miscellaneous Material]
0346
Miscellaneous Material, 1 of 5 [1913].
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; competition; prices.
0435
Miscellaneous Material, 2 of 5 [1913].
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; securities; overcapitalization; competition.
0567
Miscellaneous Material, 3 of 5 [1913].
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; competition; combination and consolidation;
overcapitalization.
0686
Miscellaneous Material, 4 of 5 [1913].
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation trial
preparation.
Principal Correspondents: J. C. McReynolds; Henry E. Colton; J. M. Dickinson;
Franklin D. Roosevelt; J. A. Fowler; Raynal C. Bolling; D. G. Kerr; Henry P.
Brown; F. D. Simmons; Barton Corneau; David A. Reed; William C. Gray;
G. Carroll Todd; William Fetzer.
Reel 16
[Miscellaneous Material cont.]
0001
Miscellaneous Material, 5 of 5 [1877–1890 and 1913].
0002 [Steel case documents, 1913.]
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation trial
preparation.
Principal Correspondents: J. M. Dickinson; Henry E. Colton; J. C. McReynolds;
Barton Corneau; J. A. Fowler; F. R. Kellogg; R. V. Lindabury; Luther Conant
Jr.; George Welwood Murray; G. W. Pepper; David A. Reed.
0248 [Miscellaneous documents, 1877–1880.]
Major Topics: Title abstract; bankruptcy; Sinking Fund Commissioner of the
District of Columbia.
0275 [Cross-examination of Daniel Drawbaugh, 1890.]
Major Topic: Telephone patent cases.
0646
Miscellaneous Material, 1 of 3 [1938].
Major Topic: FRCP decisions.
0778
Miscellaneous Material, 2 of 3 [1939].
Major Topic: FRCP decisions.
33
Frame No.
Reel 17
[Miscellaneous Material cont.]
0001
Miscellaneous Material, 3 of 3 [1892 and 1934–1939].
0001 FRCP decisions [1939].
0201 Congressional Record, Vol. 78, No. 37—February 19, 1934.
0313 Congressional Record, Vol. 78, No. 89—April 24, 1934.
0375 Congressional Record, Vol. 78, No. 91—April 26, 1934.
0494 Congressional Record, Vol. 80, No. 17—January 24, 1936.
0534 Congressional Record, Vol. 80, No. 18—January 27, 1936.
0630 Deposition of Charles R. Cross (September–October 1892).
Major Topic: Telephone patent cases.
Reel 18
[Miscellaneous Material cont.]
0001
Miscellaneous Material, 3 of 3 cont. [1892].
0001 Deposition of Charles R. Cross (September–October 1892) cont.
Major Topic: Telephone patent cases.
0045
Miscellaneous Material, 1 of 2 [1923–1926].
0046 Decisions of Courts Affecting Labor, 1923–1924.
Major Topics: Aliens; contract of employment; convict labor; employers’ liability;
hours of labor; labor unions; labor disturbances; earnings; workmen’s
compensation.
0336 Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting Labor, 1926.
Major Topics: Hours of labor; aliens; contract of employment; employers’ liability;
labor unions; earnings; workmen’s compensation.
0503 First Report of Robert W. Bonynge, Agent of the United States, before the Mixed
Claims Commission, United States and Germany (1925).
Major Topic: Claims of U.S. businesses and individuals against Germany.
Reel 19
[Miscellaneous Material cont.]
0001
Miscellaneous Material, 1 of 2 cont. [1913 and 1939].
0003 [Steel case documents, 1913.]
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation trial
preparation; price-fixing.
0046 [FRCP decisions, 1939].
0098 Injunction Proceedings [1913].
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation trial
preparation; competition; consolidation; overcapitalization.
34
Frame No.
0210
Miscellaneous Material, 2 of 2 [1869–1913].
0211 [Miscellaneous, 1867, 1882, and 1895.]
Major Topics: Expenses; notes (some in shorthand); ticket stubs.
0447 [Steel case documents: injunction proceedings, 1913.]
Major Topics: Iron and steel industry; United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation trial
preparation; consolidation.
0558 [Miscellaneous, 1869–1889.]
Major Topics: Bankruptcy; smallpox; mortality in major U.S. cities; railway bridge;
timber on public lands.
35
PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENTS INDEX
The following index is a guide to the major correspondents in this microform publication. The
first number after each entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon
refers to the frame number at which a particular file folder containing correspondence by the
person begins. Hence, 3: 0737 refers to the folder that begins at Frame 0737 of Reel 3. By
referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this guide, the researcher will
find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents,
listed in the order in which they appear on the film.
Aertsen, G., Jr.
3: 0737, 0837, 0915; 9: 0001
Almond, E. M.
5: 0450
Anderson, E. D.
3: 0194; 4: 0277, 0744, 0804, 0948;
7: 0085; 8: 0587; 9: 0001
Andrews, E. C.
4: 0243
Armer, Tom
3: 0021, 0194; 8: 0699
Ashburn, J. C.
7: 0113, 0201; 8: 0636
Ausell, S. T.
5: 0019
Babbitt, E. B.
6: 0109
Bailey, C. J.
5: 0180
Baker, Newton D.
3: 0001, 0021, 0194, 0511, 0604, 0641,
0689, 0787, 0837, 0915; 4: 0070,
0091, 0179, 0197, 0215, 0264,
0277, 0804; 5: 0124, 0180, 0296,
0341, 0497, 0609, 0792; 6: 0001,
0047, 0078, 0109, 0412, 0438,
0692, 0838, 0849; 7: 0001, 0113,
0201, 0275, 0293; 8: 0536, 0587,
0699; 9: 0001, 0289, 0651
Bamberger, Simon
7: 0085; 8: 0636; 9: 0001
Barker, J. W.
4: 0277, 0804; 5: 0001
Barker, Thomas
3: 0641, 0689; 6: 0692
Barnes, R. L.
3: 0021, 0348; 4: 0042; 9: 0001
Barnhardt, G. C.
9: 0289
Barr, George W.
4: 0433, 0592
Barrows, P. A.
5: 0414
Barry, T. H.
7: 0085; 8: 0636, 0699; 9: 0289
Barry, T. S.
5: 0471
Barton, Eugene E.
3: 0511; 9: 0289
Baruch, B. M.
3: 0021, 0194, 0641; 6: 0692; 8: 0699;
9: 0001
Benane, Driss
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
Bennett, C. A.
5: 0028; 9: 0289
Bernhardt, G. C.
6: 0412
Berry, B. L.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792
Bethel, W. A.
5: 0180
Bettman, Alfred
3: 0689; 6: 0109
Bielaski, A. B.
3: 0837, 0915; 4: 0042; 9: 0001
Black, W. M.
6: 0109
Blackwood, W. A.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
37
Blankenship, J. A.
3: 0021, 0383; 9: 0001
Bliss, Tasker
3: 0001, 0021, 0194, 0486, 0595;
4: 0215, 0983; 5: 0331; 6: 0109,
0438; 7: 0085, 0113, 0188, 0201;
8: 0587, 0628, 0699
Boettcher, A.
4: 0159, 0232; 9: 0651
Bolling, Raynal C.
15: 0686
Booker, Leon C.
3: 0021, 0311, 0348, 0383; 9: 0289
Boynton, Thomas J.
5: 0124
Bradley, O. N.
4: 0001
Brambila, R. M.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0289
Brennan, W. D.
6: 0536
Brewer, D. Chauncey
3: 0604; 5: 0124; 9: 0289
Brickhouse, Ben D.
3: 0503; 7: 0113, 0201; 8: 0699
Bridwell, J. W.
5: 0250, 0276, 0497; 9: 0289, 0651
Brough, Charles H.
3: 0511; 4: 0277, 0804; 9: 0289
Brown, A. W.
5: 0450
Brown, Frank
3: 0021, 0380; 9: 0001
Brown, George M.
4: 0243; 8: 0699
Brown, Henry P.
15: 0686
Brown, J. G.
6: 0109
Brushingham, John P.
4: 0129
Bryan, L. R.
4: 0433, 0744
Buren, Donald C. Van
4: 0113, 0277, 0592, 0804
Burke, Frank
6: 0370
Burnett, Frank C.
8: 0526, 0536; 9: 0651
Burnquist, J. A. A.
7: 0113, 0201; 8: 0587, 0636, 0699;
9: 0001
Cabell, DeR. C.
3: 0021, 0194, 0299, 0348, 0383;
6: 0536; 9: 0001, 0289
Campbell, A. G.
5: 0028
Campbell, John B.
3: 0511; 4: 0277, 0433, 0592, 0804;
5: 0414; 9: 0289
Campbell, Thomas E.
3: 0021, 0194; 8: 0699
Carlson, Harry
3: 0299
Carpenter, E. E.
6: 0109
Catts, Sidney J.
4: 0264; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0651
Cavanaugh, Ralph W.
4: 0243
Chaffin, A. D.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0651
Chamberlain, J. L.
4: 0277, 0804, 0948; 6: 0001; 9: 0001
Chappelear, L. S.
7: 0085; 8: 0636; 9: 0001
Chope, Thomas J.
3: 0641, 0689; 6: 0692
Christian, George B., Jr.
5: 0001
Churchill, M.
3: 0299, 0348, 0604, 0689, 0737, 0837,
0915; 4: 0001, 0063, 0277, 0433,
0592, 0744, 0804; 5: 0124, 0296,
0341, 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 7: 0076,
0293, 0416, 0485, 0515; 8: 0536;
9: 0001, 0289, 0651
Clayton, C. T.
7: 0001
Colton, Henry E.
15: 0686; 16: 0002
Conant, Luther, Jr.
16: 0002
Connor, W. D.
7: 0293; 8: 0536; 9: 0850
Cook, T. C.
7: 0293; 9: 0828
Coolidge, Calvin
3: 0604; 5: 0124; 9: 0289
38
Corbaley, Gordon C.
6: 0109
Corneau, Barton
15: 0686; 16: 0002
Cornish, G. R. F.
5: 0075; 9: 0651
Cotterill, Frank W.
6: 0109
Counts, Carroll M.
7: 0188, 0416
Covert, C.
7: 0001
Cox, James M.
7: 0085, 0113, 0201; 8: 0636, 0699;
9: 0001
Coxe, A. B.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 4: 0063, 0433,
0592; 5: 0609, 0792; 8: 0526, 0536;
9: 0289, 0651
Crane, Clinton H.
5: 0471; 6: 0849; 9: 0001
Cravens, R. K.
7: 0085; 9: 0001
Creighton, John
4: 0269
Crockett, Thomas B.
4: 0063, 0113, 0277, 0433, 0592, 0744,
0804, 0972; 5: 0296, 0341, 0414,
0609, 0792; 6: 0295, 0436; 7: 0416,
0515; 9: 0289
Cronkhite, A.
8: 0536
Crowder, E. H.
6: 0109; 7: 0001
Crowell, Benedict
6: 0536
Crowell, F. G.
6: 0904
Crowley, John G.
3: 0021, 0383; 9: 0001
Crozier, William
5: 0471; 6: 0109; 7: 0085; 8: 0587,
0636, 0699
Cruikshank, William M.
6: 0109, 0849; 7: 0066; 8: 0536
Cutler, J. E.
7: 0416; 9: 0289
Dade, A. L.
4: 0277, 0592, 0804; 5: 0414
Daniels, Joseph M.
6: 0001; 9: 0001
David, Warren G.
3: 0299
Davies, Hywel
3: 0689; 4: 0031; 6: 0692
Davis, Robert C.
6: 0109
Day, H. B.
6: 0536
Dean, J. T.
7: 0085; 8: 0636, 0699
Delameter, B. F., Jr.
6: 0536
Deman, R. H. Van
5: 0296; 6: 0047, 0078, 0438; 7: 0485,
0515; 8: 0699; 9: 0001
Dengel, J. H.
3: 0021, 0383, 0737, 0837, 0915;
4: 0001, 0042; 5: 0513, 0609, 0792;
6: 0295; 9: 0001
Deutler, C. E.
6: 0438
DeWare, W. C.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0651
Deyong, John H.
4: 0269
Dickey, H. S.
3: 0021, 0348; 9: 0001
Dickinson, Jacob M.
6: 0109; 15: 0686; 16: 0002
Dickman, J. T.
3: 0021, 0348, 0383; 9: 0651
Dillon, William J.
4: 0129
Donnelly, Edward T.
3: 0001, 0021; 6: 0001, 0438; 8: 0636,
0699
Dorsey, Hugh M.
5: 0497; 9: 0001, 0289
Douglas, Walter
3: 0021, 0194; 8: 0699
Dowell, C. M.
8: 0536
Duncan, James A.
6: 0109
Dunn, John M.
4: 0063; 5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 6: 0295,
0518; 7: 0293; 8: 0536; 9: 0289,
0651
39
Eastman, Watson
6: 0109
Edwards, C. R.
8: 0636
Edwards, Clarence
5: 0124
Emerson, Jay H.
4: 0433, 0592
Esden, Herbert G.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0651
Fair, J. S.
5: 0296, 0341; 9: 0289
Fenwick, G. W.
6: 0109
Fetzer, William
15: 0686
Field, William B. Osgood
3: 0757, 0837, 0915; 9: 0289
Finley, H. L.
3: 0511; 9: 0289
Fisher, Jerome C.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
Fiske, H. B.
6: 0536
Fitts, William C.
6: 0438, 0692; 8: 0699
Foertmeyer, W. A.
4: 0159
Foltz, F. S.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295
Ford, A. L.
5: 0028; 9: 0289
Ford, Stanley H.
6: 0536
Foster, Hugh M.
3: 0021, 0194; 8: 0699
Fowler, J. A.
15: 0686; 16: 0002
Fox, A. B.
4: 0070, 0091; 8: 0699
Frankfurter, Felix
3: 0689; 6: 0109, 0692; 7: 0001
Frayne, Hugh
6: 0109
Fries, Amos A.
4: 0948; 6: 0536
Frothingham, Henry A.
3: 0604; 5: 0124; 7: 0293; 9: 0289, 0651
Fuller, M. W., Jr.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001
Fuller, Samuel L.
6: 0109
Fuqua, Stephen O.
5: 0075; 9: 0651
Furey, F. H.
6: 0438
Gardner, Frederick D.
5: 0471; 8: 0699; 9: 0001
Garfield, H. A.
6: 0536
Gawzhorn, John W.
3: 0311
Geary, John W.
5: 0296; 7: 0485, 0515; 9: 0289
Germer, Will H.
3: 0757, 0837, 0915; 4: 0001; 9: 0001,
0289
Glasser, Abraham
9: 0863
Gompers, Samuel
6: 0109
Graves, William S.
5: 0019, 0486; 7: 0085; 8: 0587, 0699;
9: 0001
Gray, William C.
15: 0686
Greene, L. D.
7: 0275, 0293; 9: 0828
Greenway, John C.
3: 0001, 0021; 8: 0699
Gregory, T. W.
3: 0689
Griffith, F. D., Jr.
8: 0526, 0536; 9: 0828
Griggs, E. G.
6: 0109
Gund, George
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001
Haan, W. G.
7: 0293; 8: 0526, 0536, 0584; 9: 0651,
0828
Hall, Herman
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0651
Hall, Roy F.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0404; 9: 0651
Hamlin, C. S.
6: 0838
Hansen, Ole
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
40
Harbord, J. G.
6: 0536, 0838; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0828
Hardaway, Benjamin H.
4: 0179, 0197; 9: 0001
Harding, Warren G.
7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0850
Hardy, Edwin N.
3: 0383
Harris, F. C.
3: 0021, 0194, 0296, 0299, 0604, 0757;
4: 0277, 0592, 0804; 5: 0124, 0497;
9: 0289, 0651
Harris, Nat E.
4: 0983
Harry, G. Y.
3: 0641; 4: 0433, 0744; 6: 0692
Harvey, C. J.
6: 0412; 7: 0416; 8: 0699
Hatfield, Henry D.
6: 0536
Hayes, Ralph
6: 0412; 9: 0289
Heavey, John W.
3: 0689, 0737, 0837, 0915; 9: 0001
Hedekin, C. A.
6: 0045; 7: 0293; 9: 0001
Hegge, Fred
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001
Heistand, H. O. S.
7: 0113, 0201; 8: 0699
Herman, R. J.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915
Hilen, A. R.
6: 0438
Hines, Frank T.
5: 0246, 0296, 0341; 7: 0113, 0201,
0293; 9: 0289
Hobby, W. P.
5: 0976; 6: 0001; 8: 0699
Hodges, H. F.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 5: 0359; 9: 0651
Hodges, W. F.
4: 0277, 0433, 0592, 0804
Hoffman, Peter M.
4: 0129
Holley, G. M.
7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0651
Hoover, J. Edgar
6: 0370
Hornbrook, James J.
3: 0001, 0021, 0194
Howard, Charles P.
5: 0486; 9: 0289
Hull, J. A.
7: 0188
Humphrey, E. H.
4: 0744; 7: 0293; 9: 0651
Hunt, George W. P.
3: 0021, 0194, 0383; 9: 0001
Ingraham, William M.
6: 0047, 0078, 0438; 7: 0113, 0201;
8: 0636, 0699
Irwin, G. Le R.
4: 0277, 0804; 5: 0001
Israel, Robert Scott
7: 0188
Jackson, Edward B.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0651
Jervey, Henry
3: 0757, 0787, 0837; 4: 0277, 0804;
5: 0001; 6: 0412, 0536; 7: 0085;
8: 0587; 9: 0001, 0289, 0651
Johnson, A. M., Jr.
3: 0021, 0194, 0348; 8: 0699
Johnson, Francis P. T., Sr.
4: 0277, 0804, 0948
Johnson, Neal C.
4: 0055; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0001
Johnston, Gordon
4: 0159, 0433, 0804
Jones, Paul S.
4: 0277, 0804, 0948
Jones, W. L.
6: 0047, 0078, 0438; 8: 0699
Karr, Peyton T.
4: 0243; 8: 0699
Keating, J. P.
6: 0109
Kellogg, F. R.
16: 0002
Kelly, Con. [Cornelius] F.
3: 0641; 6: 0692
Kelly, John R.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915
Kelly, William, Jr.
4: 0055; 6: 0001, 0427; 7: 0085, 0113,
0201; 8: 0699; 9: 0001
41
Kennedy, Elizabeth
3: 0915
Kerr, D. G.
15: 0686
Kerr, J. T.
6: 0047, 0078, 0438; 8: 0699
Kerwin, H. L.
3: 0503; 5: 0028; 6: 0109; 7: 0113,
0201; 8: 0699; 9: 0289
Kilby, Thomas E.
6: 0536
Kindler, Charles J.
5: 0296; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0289
King, Harry L.
4: 0948; 6: 0531, 0838; 7: 0113, 0201;
9: 0828
King, Stanley
6: 0109
Kinkead, E. F.
3: 0299; 9: 0001
Kirby, W. F.
3: 0511
Knabenshue, F. G.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001
Koons, J. C.
6: 0838; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0001
Kuhn, Joseph E.
6: 0109
Ladd, J. A.
4: 0277, 0744
Lamar, N. H.
3: 0787, 0837; 9: 0651
Langdon, R. C.
3: 0511; 9: 0289
Lawson, F. S.
6: 0109
Learnard, H. G.
4: 0948; 5: 0406; 6: 0531; 8: 0699
Leitch, J. D.
5: 0513
Lewis, E. M.
5: 0028, 0276; 9: 0289
Lewis, H. T.
5: 0414
Lewis, J. E.
3: 0021, 0194; 8: 0699
Liggett, H.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915
Lincoln, F. H.
5: 0450
Lindabury, R. V.
16: 0002
Lindsey, W. E.
4: 0215
Lindsey, W. K.
8: 0699
Lippmann, Wall
6: 0047, 0078, 0438; 8: 0699
Lister, Ernest
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 6: 0438, 0849;
9: 0289
Livingston, Ernest
6: 0438
Long, Henry F.
3: 0604; 5: 0124
Lord, Edwin B.
5: 0392
Maddox, George W.
5: 0075; 9: 0651
Mahone, W. B.
5: 0250, 0276; 9: 0651
Mainwaring, William D.
4: 0433, 0744
Mann, H. E.
3: 0021, 0383; 8: 0699
Mapes, W. S.
4: 0277, 0592, 0804, 0948
March, P. C.
5: 0414; 6: 0536; 9: 0289
Marsh, E. P.
9: 0289
Marsh, N. P.
5: 0486
Marshall, F. C.
5: 0075; 9: 0651
Mathews, J. R.
4: 0243; 8: 0699
Mathews, M. A.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
McArthur, C. N.
6: 0109
McCabe, E. R. W.
3: 0604; 5: 0124; 9: 0289
McCain, G. R.
3: 0279; 9: 0001
McCain, Henry P.
3: 0001, 0021, 0175, 0194, 0279, 0311,
0486, 0595, 0837, 0915; 4: 0070,
0091, 0179, 0197, 0215, 0243;
5: 0025, 0180, 0238, 0406, 0471,
42
0976; 6: 0001, 0047, 0078, 0109,
0427, 0438, 0838, 0849; 7: 0066,
0085, 0113, 0201, 0275, 0293;
8: 0587, 0628, 0636, 0699; 9: 0001
McCarron, E. F.
8: 0526, 0536; 9: 0651
McConaughy, J. W.
6: 0109, 0904; 7: 0001
McConnell, F. J.
4: 0433, 0744
McMahon, Brien
5: 0450
McManus, Bert
6: 0438
McMichael, O. W.
4: 0129
McNair, W. S.
7: 0293; 9: 0828
McRea, Thomas
3: 0503; 9: 0828
McReynolds, J. C.
15: 0686; 16: 0002
McWade, Robert M.
5: 0486; 6: 0109
Millis, John
7: 0293; 9: 0850
Mitchell, Eugene H.
3: 0021, 0383; 9: 0001
Mitchell, Manton C.
4: 0277, 0804, 0948
Morgan, A. S.
3: 0021, 0194, 0348
Morrison, Frank
6: 0109
Morrison, J. F.
3: 0757; 5: 0359, 0513; 8: 0636; 9: 0001
Morrow, G. L.
4: 0744; 9: 0651
Morton, Bliss
5: 0392; 6: 0370
Mulvey, J. A.
5: 0124; 7: 0293; 9: 0651
Murray, Arthur
3: 0689, 0837, 0915; 9: 0001
Murray, George Welwood
16: 0002
Murray, Philip
6: 0536
Myers, H. L.
3: 0641; 6: 0692
Myers, Joseph S.
3: 0021, 0380; 5: 0250, 0276; 9: 0001,
0651
Nally, Edward J.
6: 0109
Nathan, Harold
6: 0370
Neidert, O. W.
5: 0414; 9: 0289
Newhill, T. J.
6: 0438
Nockels, E. N.
4: 0269
O’Brian, John Lord
3: 0689, 0837, 0915; 4: 0001; 6: 0109;
9: 0001
Ogden, D.
4: 0433, 0592
O’Hare, J. J.
5: 0296, 0341; 9: 0289
O’Kelley, Jas. H. E.
4: 0998
Olin, F. W.
6: 0109
Oller, George E.
6: 0109
Palmer, A. Mitchell
3: 0604; 5: 0124; 9: 0289
Parker, Carleton
6: 0109
Parker, James
3: 0001, 0021, 0175, 0194, 0279, 0296,
0486; 9: 0001
Passailaigue, Edward P.
3: 0511; 9: 0289
Peake, A. S.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 4: 0042; 9: 0651
Penny, Clifford
6: 0518; 7: 0293; 9: 0651
Pepper, G. W.
16: 0002
Pershing, John J.
6: 0109
Peters, Andrew J.
5: 0124
Philips, William
6: 0109
Piez, Charles A.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792
43
Pillsbury, A. F.
6: 0109
Pitts, William C.
3: 0998; 6: 0047, 0078
Pleasant, R. G.
7: 0085; 8: 0636; 9: 0001, 0289
Poage, Robert C.
3: 0511; 9: 0289, 0651
Poindexter, Miles
6: 0109
Poling, Daniel A.
4: 0433, 0744
Polson, Alex
6: 0109
Potts, F. G.
5: 0028; 9: 0289
Presley, James A.
3: 0299
Purcell, James
4: 0433, 0744
Quarles, A. H.
6: 0109
Rankin, Jeannette
3: 0680; 6: 0692
Ransdell, Joseph E.
9: 0857
Read, G. W.
6: 0536
Redfield, William C.
5: 0296, 0341; 9: 0289
Reed, David A.
15: 0686; 16: 0002
Reedy, I. D.
3: 0021, 0348, 0383; 9: 0001
Reynolds, J. C. H.
6: 0438
Rice, Cecil Spring
6: 0438
Richardson, Wilde
5: 0028; 9: 0289
Ricketts, J. W.
4: 0277, 0804, 0948
Riddle, W. M.
8: 0699
Roberts, A. S.
5: 0028
Roberts, John C.
7: 0201; 8: 0636
Robinson, Joe T.
3: 0503, 0511; 9: 0828
Robinson, W. A.
6: 0438
Rock, Logan N.
8: 0536
Rodgers, W. H.
3: 0641; 6: 0692
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
15: 0686
Ruckman, John W.
3: 0194, 0279; 6: 0001; 8: 0699; 9: 0001
Russell, George M.
4: 0159; 8: 0526, 0536; 9: 0651
Ryan, John A.
4: 0433, 0744
Ryan, John D.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0651
Ryan, R. Keene
4: 0129
Rye, Tom C.
4: 0070, 0091; 8: 0699
Saville, M. E.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001
Sawyer, B. N.
6: 0109
Schoeffel, John B.
9: 0289
Scott, H. L.
6: 0109; 7: 0066
Scott, W. R.
5: 0075; 9: 0651
Sebastian, Henry G.
6: 0412; 7: 0416; 9: 0289
Shanks, David C.
8: 0536
Sharpe, Henry G.
5: 0971; 6: 0536; 9: 0289
Sheldon, Raymond
5: 0250, 0276; 7: 0293; 9: 0651
Sheppard, Morris
6: 0109
Shipton, J. A.
9: 0289
Shute, G. W.
3: 0194
Simmons, F. D.
15: 0686
Simon, Arthur
3: 0021, 0348; 9: 0001
Slavens, Thomas H.
6: 0536
44
Smith, George E.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792
Smith, Lawrence M. C.
9: 0863
Smith, Wilfred F.
5: 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0289
Spangenberg, P. H.
7: 0001
Spencer, Theodore K.
3: 0604
Sproul, William C.
7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0850
Stancliff, G. L.
3: 0021, 0311, 0383; 9: 0001
Stanley, A. C.
8: 0587
Stewart, S. V.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 6: 0849; 9: 0651
Strauss, H. A.
3: 0604; 5: 0124, 0296, 0341; 7: 0416,
0485, 0515; 9: 0289, 0651
Sturgis, S. D.
4: 0983; 7: 0085; 8: 0699
Sullivan, W. H.
9: 0289
Suzzallo, Henry
6: 0109; 7: 0001
Swain, David W.
5: 0296; 7: 0485, 0515; 9: 0289
Tally, Robert E.
3: 0348
Taylor, Charles Perry
6: 0109
Thiele, C. M.
7: 0201; 8: 0587
Thomson, A. T.
3: 0021, 0279; 8: 0699
Todd, G. Carroll
15: 0686
Trent, Joseph P.
6: 0412
Tucker, E. W.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792
Urmy, William H.
5: 0486; 6: 0109; 9: 0289
Vennewitz, E. J.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
Wahl, Lutz
3: 0021, 0194, 0486; 9: 0001
Wainwright, J. M.
4: 0277, 0804; 5: 0001
Walker, John C., Jr.
3: 0001, 0021; 8: 0699
Walsh, J. T.
3: 0757, 0837, 0915; 9: 0289
Waltz, F. R.
4: 0277, 0592, 0804
Warren, F. E.
6: 0536
Watkins, Rolin G.
3: 0915; 4: 0001, 0042; 5: 0513, 0609,
0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001
Watson, F. B.
3: 0757
Weaver, E. M.
6: 0109
Weeks, John W.
4: 0277, 0804; 5: 0001; 6: 0536, 0838;
7: 0113, 0201, 0293; 9: 0828, 0860
Weigel, William
7: 0293; 8: 0513; 9: 0651
Welborn, I. C.
9: 0001
Wende, G. H.
9: 0001
Westcott, F. E.
4: 0277, 0744, 0804
Wheeler, Charles B.
5: 0389
Wheeler, M. D.
3: 0511; 5: 0028; 9: 0289, 0651
White, George P.
3: 0194
White, H. C.
9: 0289
White, J. A.
6: 0536
Whitman, Charles L.
7: 0113, 0201; 8: 0587; 9: 0001
Willard, Robert A.
5: 0028; 9: 0289
Williams, C. C.
7: 0113, 0201; 8: 0636; 9: 0001
Williams, George W.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792
Williams, H. C.
5: 0296; 7: 0293
45
Williams, James T., Jr.
6: 0536
Williams, Roger, Jr.
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 9: 0828
Wilson, F. W.
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0001,
0289
Wilson, J. B.
3: 0689; 8: 0587
Wilson, W. B.
3: 0001, 0021, 0194, 0641, 0689;
4: 0269, 0433, 0744; 6: 0047, 0078,
0109, 0438, 0692, 0904; 7: 0001;
8: 0699; 9: 0001
Wilson, Woodrow
6: 0109, 0427; 8: 0699
Withycomber, James
6: 0438; 8: 0699
Wood, Leonard
4: 0277, 0433, 0592, 0804; 5: 0414;
7: 0001; 8: 0587; 9: 0289
Wood, William H.
4: 0277, 0804, 0948
Woodruff, R. B.
3: 0383
Wright, W. M.
7: 0293; 9: 0828
Wuest, Jacob W. S.
5: 0414; 9: 0289
Wyllie, Robert E.
4: 0948; 6: 0531; 9: 0289
Wynne, Samuel
5: 0513, 0609, 0792; 9: 0289
Young, C. O.
7: 0001
46
SUBJECT INDEX
The following index is a guide to the major topics in this microfilm publication. The first
number after an entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to
the frame number at which the subject begins. Hence, 1: 0635 refers to the folder that begins at
Frame 0635 of Reel 1. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this
guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and
Principal Correspondents, listed in the order in which they appear on the film.
general 1: 0006, 0387, 0871; 3: 0915;
4: 0215, 0433, 0592, 0804; 7: 0485;
18: 0046, 0336
Germans 6: 0438
Mexicans 3: 0021, 0194, 0311, 0348,
0383
American Federation of Labor (AFL)
3: 0021, 0689; 10: 0838
Anaconda Copper Mining Company
general 3: 0915; 4: 0001; 10: 0116,
0583
labor contract 3: 0641; 6: 0692
Arizona
Bisbee 3: 0001; 9: 0882
census data (1930) 3: 0414
copper strikes (1917) 9: 0901
general 3: 0021, 0182, 0194, 0311,
0348, 0380, 0383, 0414, 0486;
10: 0001
Globe 3: 0279, 0299
Jerome 3: 0296, 0299
Labor Department representatives
3: 0383
Miami 3: 0175
ties of Governor George W. P. Hunt to
IWW 3: 0311, 0348, 0383
Arkansas
Little Rock 3: 0503
race riots (1919–1920) 3: 0511
Army
attitude 6: 0436
and IWW 6: 0438
regulations 5: 0180
Adams, John
1: 0635, 0638, 0653
Adams, John Quincy
1: 0662
African Americans
general 3: 0511; 4: 0113, 0243, 0592,
0983; 5: 0075, 0414; 7: 0188, 0416;
8: 0699; 9: 0289, 0651, 0828
Justice Department investigation
6: 0412
living conditions 4: 0129
National Urban League 7: 0416; 9: 0289
race riots 3: 0511; 4: 0113, 0129;
5: 0075, 0276, 0369, 0414, 0971;
6: 0045, 0412; 7: 0416; 9: 0001,
0289, 0651
radicalism 7: 0416
Aircraft and aerospace industry
6: 0109, 0438
Alcohol and alcoholic beverages
imports 4: 0264; 9: 0651
moonshine still 4: 0277, 0433, 0804
Alcohol and alcoholic beverages control
laws
Prohibition 4: 0264; 7: 0113, 0201;
9: 0651
troops to enforce 5: 0243; 7: 0113,
0201; 9: 0001
Aliens
Alien Enemy Proclamation 6: 0427
arrest and detention 4: 0277; 8: 0699
Austrians 3: 0021, 0194
enemy 3: 0279, 0296, 0299, 0348,
0383, 0486, 0757; 5: 0180; 6: 0427;
8: 0699; 12: 0148; 14: 0051
47
Arrest
general 4: 0001, 0744; 10: 0583
IWW leaders 3: 0915; 9: 0001
see also Military detention and arrest
Astoria, Oregon
3: 0595
Austria
Austrians in U.S. 3: 0021, 0194
Bankruptcy
16: 0248; 19: 0558
Bibb City, Georgia
4: 0998
Bisbee, Arizona
3: 0001; 9: 0882
Bogalusa, Louisiana
3: 0602
Bonynge, Robert W.
18: 0503
Borders
U.S.-Mexico 5: 0180
Boston, Massachusetts
general 5: 0124
police strike (1919) 3: 0604
Bridges and tunnels
19: 0558
Bureau of Labor Statistics
publications 8: 0129
Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and
Abandoned Lands, Department of the
Adjutant General
1: 0226
Butte Daily Bulletin (newspaper)
3: 0787, 0837, 0915; 4: 0042; 9: 0651
Butte, Montana
miners’ strikes (1917–1920) 3: 0641–
0998; 4: 0001–0042; 10: 0116–0657
statistical data on families 7: 0532
troops in 5: 0359
California
Bethlehem strike (1918) 4: 0055
Case law
FRCP decisions 16: 0646, 0778;
17: 0001; 19: 0046
labor decisions 18: 0046, 0336
Censorship
4: 0277, 0804; 7: 0076; 8: 0526, 0536;
9: 0001
Census
Arizona data (1930) 3: 0414
Centralia, Washington
4: 0063
Charleston, South Carolina
5: 0971
Chattanooga, Tennessee
4: 0070, 0091
Chicago, Illinois
race riots (1919) 4: 0113, 0129
Citizenship
1: 0204
Civil liberties
freedom of speech 14: 0782, 0835
general 3: 0001; 13: 0966; 14: 0495,
0555
habeas corpus 2: 0767, 0851, 0899,
0951, 1028; 13: 0953, 0966;
14: 0001, 0035, 0051, 0271, 0333,
0396, 0641, 0835; 15: 0001
right to bear arms 14: 0594
searches and seizures 1: 0006, 0057,
0126, 0193, 0204, 0282, 0344,
0387, 0409, 0441, 0554, 0579,
0591, 0607; 4: 0277
voting rights 1: 0237
Civil-military relations
general 1: 0638–0804, 0982, 0991;
2: 0876; 3: 0194, 0486, 0689, 0787,
0915; 5: 0971; 6: 0001, 0109;
10: 0583; 14: 0001, 0396; 15: 0001–
0204
military action restricted to protection of
life and property 4: 0070, 0091;
8: 0699
Civil War, U.S.
2: 0899
Claims
U.S. against Germany 18: 0503
Coal and coal mining
6: 0536
Colorado
Denver 4: 0159, 0232
Columbus, Georgia
4: 0179, 0197
Columbus, New Mexico
4: 0215
Communism
3: 0021, 0604; 5: 0450; 7: 0188; 9: 0289
Compulsory military service
2: 0767; 4: 0055; 7: 0113, 0201, 0275;
9: 0001; 10: 0247, 0392
48
Confederate States of America
2: 0899
Congress
1: 0797–0963
Congressional Record
17: 0201–0534
Connecticut
2: 0039
Conservation of natural resources
1: 0226, 0237, 0282–0319, 0333, 0344,
0369–0409, 0441–0508, 0554,
0579–0607
Constitution of U.S.
1: 0245, 0428, 0441, 0635, 0797, 0871,
0982, 0991; 2: 0001, 0052, 0466,
0547, 0713, 0876, 0940, 0951;
4: 0277, 0804; 13: 0953, 0966;
14: 0001, 0051–0271, 0333, 0360,
0396, 0555, 0594, 0632, 0670,
0696, 0719, 0782–0927; 15: 0001–
0204
see also Civil liberties
Convict labor
18: 0046
Copper and copper industry
Arizona strikes (1917) 9: 0901
Butte, Mont., strikes (1917–1920)
3: 0641–0998; 4: 0001–0042;
10: 0116–0657
general 3: 0001–0175, 0194, 0279,
0348, 0641; 4: 0031; 10: 0116;
11: 0172, 0334
see also Anaconda Copper Mining
Company
Cost of living
7: 0532; 8: 0129
Crime and criminals
arson 4: 0113
general 1: 0057, 0091, 0154, 0662;
2: 0001, 0654; 6: 0423
lynching of Frank Little 10: 0116, 0583
Cross, Charles R.
17: 0630; 18: 0001
Customs administration
1: 0006, 0111, 0607
Deaths
general 4: 0129
lynching of Frank Little 10: 0116, 0583
mortality in major U.S. cities 19: 0558
murder trial 5: 0976
Demonstrations and protests
13: 0966; 14: 0484, 0970
see also Riots and disorders
see also Strikes
Denver, Colorado
4: 0159, 0232
Deportation
Bisbee, Ariz. (1917) 3: 0001, 0021,
0194, 0837; 4: 0269; 9: 0882, 0901;
10: 0001; 11: 0334
Disaster relief
1: 0319, 0344, 0387, 0409, 0428, 0453,
0468, 0545–0566, 0579; 5: 0180
Disasters
5: 0238
Diseases and disorders
general 1: 0263, 0300, 0305, 0319,
0328, 0333, 0344, 0369, 0441, 0508
smallpox 19: 0558
Drawbaugh, Daniel
16: 0275
Earnings
3: 0299, 0414, 0641, 0757, 0915;
4: 0159, 0232; 6: 0692; 7: 0532;
10: 0116–0508, 0657; 11: 0436,
0747; 18: 0046, 0336
East St. Louis, Illinois
4: 0243
Elections
1: 0193, 0226, 0274, 0409
Employment
employers’ liability 18: 0046, 0336
labor contract 18: 0046, 0336
unemployment 3: 0380
see also Earnings
see also Hours of labor
see also Labor disturbances
see also Labor-management relations
see also Labor mobility
see also Labor unions
Espionage Act
3: 0689; 6: 0109
Extradition
3: 0021, 0279
Fayetteville, North Carolina
5: 0369
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
9: 0863; 10: 0247–0508
49
Federal emergency plans for domestic
disturbances
8: 0526–0584; 9: 0850; 10: 0710;
12: 0225
Federal protection of strategic locations
6: 0109, 0438, 0838, 0904; 7: 0001,
0066, 0085, 0113, 0201, 0293;
8: 0587–0699; 9: 0001, 0828, 0850;
12: 0148
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP)
12: 0259–13: 0855; 16: 0646, 0778;
17: 0001; 19: 0046
Federal-state relations
1: 0694, 0804, 0822; 2: 0001, 0039,
0062–0466, 0547–0669, 0713,
0767, 0951; 3: 0194, 0299, 0511;
14: 0927
Florida
Key West 4: 0264
Forced labor
1: 0204, 0226
see also Slaves and slavery
Foreign relations
2: 0001
Foreign trade
1: 0057, 0154, 0204, 0607, 0631
Franklin, Benjamin
2: 0542
Freedmen’s Bureau
see Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen,
and Abandoned Lands, Department
of the Adjutant General
Freight
troops to unload 5: 0246; 9: 0289
Garvey, Marcus
7: 0416; 9: 0289
Gary, Indiana
4: 0269–0972
Georgia
Bibb City 4: 0998
Columbus 4: 0179, 0197
general 4: 0983
Savannah 5: 0497
Germany
Germans in U.S. 6: 0438
U.S. claims against 18: 0503
Glaser, Paul P.
4: 0433, 0592, 0804
Globe, Arizona
3: 0279, 0299
Gompers, Samuel
11: 0436, 0597
Government-citizen relations
1: 0638–0694; 2: 0231
Government supplies and property
7: 0275; 8: 0587
Grains and grain products
5: 0367
Habeas corpus
2: 0767, 0851, 0899, 0951, 1028;
13: 0953, 0966; 14: 0001, 0035,
0051, 0271, 0333, 0396, 0641,
0835; 15: 0001
Hamilton, Ohio
5: 0389
Hammond, Indiana
5: 0001
Harbors and ports
1: 0057, 0282, 0305
Haywood, William D.
4: 0433, 0592, 0804; 12: 0001
Hill, Robert L.
9: 0651
Hoffman, Peter M.
4: 0129
Homicide
see Murder
Hours of labor
3: 0414; 6: 0109, 0692, 0904; 7: 0001;
10: 0838, 0922; 11: 0001, 0065,
0747; 18: 0046, 0336
Hunt, George W. P.
3: 0311, 0348, 0383
Idaho
general 5: 0019
St. Maries 5: 0486
Illinois
Chicago 4: 0113, 0129
East St. Louis 4: 0243
Peoria strike (1917) 5: 0025
Immigration and emigration
7: 0188
see also Aliens
Indiana
Gary 4: 0269–0972
Hammond 5: 0001
Indians
1: 0006–0126, 0154, 0193, 0256, 0274,
0305
50
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)
activities 3: 0021; 4: 0063, 0277, 0592;
5: 0406, 0513–0792; 6: 0047–0398,
0438, 0692, 0849, 0904; 7: 0066,
0410; 8: 0513; 9: 0001–0651;
12: 0225
and army 6: 0438
general 3: 0001–0279, 0299–0348,
0383, 0641, 0689–0998; 4: 0042,
0433, 0804; 5: 0019, 0296, 0341,
0486; 6: 0047, 0078, 0404, 0849;
7: 0416–0515; 8: 0699; 9: 0828,
0863–0901; 10: 0001–0657, 0838,
0922; 11: 0001–0334, 0866;
12: 0001
leaders arrested 3: 0915; 9: 0001
lynching of Frank Little 10: 0116, 0583
members 4: 0001, 0215
philosophy 4: 0031
Insurgency
1: 0154, 0193, 0245, 0508, 0526, 0631,
0638, 0653, 0963, 0991; 2: 0001,
0466, 0547, 0727, 0767, 0823,
0899, 0917, 0951
International sanctions
1: 0006–0091; 2: 0547
Iron and steel industry
competition 15: 0346–0567; 19: 0098
general 11: 0436–0866; 15: 0346–0686;
16: 0002; 19: 0003, 0098, 0447
strike (1919) 11: 0436–0866; 12: 0001
strike (1920) 8: 0511
see also United States v. U.S. Steel
Corporation
Jefferson, Thomas
2: 0547
Jerome, Arizona
3: 0296, 0299
Justice, U.S. Department of
general 7: 0416; 9: 0289; 11: 0065,
0597, 0866; 12: 0148
investigation of African Americans
6: 0412
Kennedy, Joe
3: 0915; 4: 0001, 0042; 9: 0289
Kentucky
Lexington race riots (1920) 5: 0075
Key West, Florida
Prohibition 4: 0264
Knoxville, Tennessee
5: 0028
Labor, U.S. Department of
and Arizona 3: 0380, 0383
publications 8: 0129
Labor disturbances
3: 0001–0348, 0383, 0486–0998;
4: 0001, 0042, 0055, 0070, 0091,
0159–0243, 0269–0804, 0972,
0998; 5: 0001, 0025, 0028, 0124,
0180, 0246–0359, 0389, 0392,
0471–0792; 6: 0001, 0047–0370,
0438, 0518, 0536–0692, 0849,
0904; 7: 0001, 0113, 0201–0410,
0485, 0515; 8: 0513, 0699; 9: 0001–
0828, 0857–0901; 10: 0001–
11: 0866; 12: 0001, 0148; 13: 0953;
14: 0271, 0555, 0632, 0641, 0726,
0835; 15: 0001, 0110; 18: 0046
see also Strikes
Labor-management relations
4: 0031, 0159, 0232; 5: 0486; 6: 0109;
10: 0838; 11: 0065, 0747
see also Strikes
Labor mobility
rustling card system 3: 0641, 0680;
6: 0692; 10: 0116, 0657
Labor unions
general 3: 0311, 0641, 0689; 6: 0692;
9: 0001, 0289, 0651; 10: 0116–
0392, 0657, 0838, 0922; 11: 0001,
0065, 0436–0866; 12: 0225;
18: 0046, 0336
membership 5: 0486; 6: 0109
see also American Federation of Labor
(AFL)
see also Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW)
see also Marine Transport Workers
Land ownership and rights
title abstract 16: 0248
Law journals
see Periodicals
Lexington, Kentucky
race riots (1920) 5: 0075
Lincoln, Abraham
2: 0767
Little, Frank
10: 0116, 0583
51
quartering 3: 0194, 0486; 9: 0001
suppression of vice and liquor traffic
5: 0243; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0001
treatment of returned soldiers acting as
pickets 3: 0757, 0837, 0915
troop withdrawal 3: 0021–0279, 0299,
0383, 0511, 0787–0915; 4: 0055,
0179, 0197, 0243, 0744; 5: 0028,
0075, 0414; 6: 0047, 0078, 0438,
0536, 0838, 0904; 7: 0113, 0293;
8: 0699; 9: 0001–0651, 0901;
10: 0001, 0247; 11: 0172, 0334;
12: 0001
unloading freight 5: 0246; 9: 0289
Military service
1: 0797
Military supplies and property
3: 0604; 5: 0124
Military weapons
1: 0631; 3: 0604; 5: 0124
Mines and mineral resources
Arizona strikes (1917) 9: 0901
Butte, Mont., strikes (1917–1920)
3: 0641–0998; 4: 0001–0042;
10: 0116–0657
coal 6: 0536
general 3: 0414; 6: 0438, 0692
lead 5: 0471
rustling card system 3: 0641, 0680;
6: 0692; 10: 0116, 0657
see also Copper and copper industry
see also Iron and steel industry
Mississippi
5: 0238
Missouri
St. Francis 5: 0471
Montana
see Butte, Montana
Montesano, Washington
6: 0404
Murder
Mickle, Ivie, trial 5: 0976
see also Lynching
National Guard
3: 0001, 0021; 4: 0983; 5: 0180;
7: 0085, 0275, 0293; 8: 0536, 0636,
0699; 9: 0828; 10: 0116, 0583,
0710, 0922; 12: 0148; 14: 0594;
15: 0110, 0204
Little Rock, Arkansas
3: 0503
Louisiana
Bogalusa 3: 0602
general 6: 0001
New Orleans 5: 0246–0276
Lumber industry and products
5: 0486; 6: 0047–0295, 0438, 0692,
0904; 7: 0001, 0066; 10: 0838,
0922; 11: 0001, 0065; 19: 0558
Lynching
Little, Frank 10: 0116, 0583
Madison, James
2: 0669–0713
Marine Transport Workers
7: 0470–0515; 9: 0001, 0289; 12: 0225
Martial law
general 2: 0545, 0727, 0765, 0820,
0851, 0899–0940, 1028; 3: 0915;
11: 0597, 0866; 12: 0001; 13: 0953,
0966; 14: 0001, 0271, 0333, 0386,
0396, 0495–0555, 0627–0738,
0835, 0959; 15: 0001–0305
proclamation 4: 0277, 0592, 0804;
5: 0075
Maryland
2: 0047
Massachusetts
Boston 3: 0604; 5: 0124
general 2: 0052
Mexico
border with U.S. 5: 0180
Mexicans in U.S. 3: 0021, 0194, 0311,
0348, 0383
Miami, Arizona
3: 0175
Mickle, Ivie
5: 0976
Military detention and arrest
3: 0689, 0737, 0837, 0915; 4: 0042;
9: 0001; 10: 0247, 0392
Military law
1: 0982; 2: 0727, 0851, 0940, 1028;
13: 0966; 14: 0001, 0051, 0227,
0271, 0330, 0386, 0396, 0495,
0555, 0712, 0726, 0738, 0835;
15: 0001, 0110, 0305
Military personnel
general 5: 0180
increase in 5: 0180
52
Nationalist Party
5: 0450
National Urban League
7: 0416; 9: 0289
Naval expeditions and surveys
1: 0146
Navy, U.S. Department of
1: 0006
Nebraska
Omaha 5: 0406, 0414
Neutrality
1: 0453; 2: 0951
New Jersey
5: 0243
New Mexico
Columbus 4: 0215
New Orleans, Louisiana
5: 0246–0276
Newspapers
Butte Daily Bulletin 3: 0787–0915;
4: 0042; 9: 0651
Denver Post 4: 0159
New York State
dock strike (1919) 5: 0335
garment workers’ strike (1917) 5: 0331
general 2: 0062; 5: 0296
longshoremen’s strike (1919) 5: 0341
Nonfederal employees
use of federally owned arms 4: 0277,
0804; 5: 0001
North Carolina
Fayetteville 5: 0369
general 2: 0198
Wilmington 5: 0369
Winston-Salem 5: 0369
Ohio
general 5: 0392
Hamilton 5: 0389
Oklahoma
6: 0001
Omaha, Nebraska
5: 0406, 0414
Ordnance Department
6: 0109
Oregon
Astoria 3: 0595
Overcapitalization
15: 0435, 0567; 19: 0098
Panama Canal
1: 0369, 0441, 0591
Parades and demonstrations
4: 0001, 0070, 0091; 5: 0450
Patents
telephones 16: 0275; 17: 0630; 18: 0001
Pennsylvania
2: 0082
Peoria, Illinois
strike (1917) 5: 0025
Periodicals
6: 0436; 13: 0953–15: 0305
Petroleum and petroleum industry
6: 0001
Philippines
1: 0468, 0591, 0599
Police
2: 0727; 3: 0604, 0689; 4: 0129, 0243,
0592; 5: 0124, 0414; 9: 0289;
14: 0484
Political parties
Nationalist Party 5: 0450
Postal service
2: 0951
Presidential powers
1: 0006–0142, 0150–0204, 0245, 0263,
0274, 0293, 0300, 0319, 0333,
0369, 0441, 0508, 0526, 0599,
0607, 0662, 0694, 0804, 0822,
0871; 2: 0001, 0098–0324, 0466,
0654–0713, 0767, 0876, 0899,
0951; 6: 0109; 9: 0863; 10: 0710;
13: 0966; 14: 0001, 0051, 0227,
0271, 0360, 0396, 0555, 0670,
0738; 15: 0001
Prices
fixing 19: 0003
general 15: 0346
retail 7: 0532, 0686; 8: 0002–0230
wholesale 7: 0686
Prisoners
convict labor 18: 0046
protection by federal troops 3: 0503
Prohibition
4: 0264; 7: 0113, 0201; 9: 0651
Propaganda
general 3: 0021
and military morale 7: 0293
radical 8: 0526, 0536
53
race riots 3: 0511; 4: 0113, 0129;
5: 0075, 0276, 0369, 0414, 0971;
6: 0045, 0412; 7: 0416; 9: 0001,
0289, 0651
Rivers and waterways
1: 0341, 0441
Sabotage Act
11: 0172
Savannah, Georgia
5: 0497
Searches and seizures
1: 0006, 0057, 0126, 0193, 0204, 0282,
0344, 0387, 0409, 0441, 0554,
0579, 0591, 0607; 4: 0277
Seattle, Washington
general strike (1918) 5: 0513
shipyard strike (1918–1920) 5: 0609,
0792
Securities
15: 0435
Slaves and slavery
1: 0154, 0409; 2: 0324
Smallpox
19: 0558
Soldiers’, Sailors’ and Workmen’s
Council
5: 0513–0792; 6: 0295; 9: 0289
South Carolina
Charleston 5: 0971
general 2: 0222
State government
1: 0226, 0237, 0694; 2: 0547
St. Francis, Missouri
5: 0471
St. Maries, Idaho
5: 0486
Strikes
Arizona copper miners (1917) 9: 0901
Boston, Mass., police (1919) 3: 0604
California (1918) 4: 0055
New York dock workers (1919) 5: 0335
New York garment workers (1917)
5: 0331
New York longshoremen (1919) 5: 0341
Peoria, Ill. (1917) 5: 0025
settlement 3: 0689; 5: 0250, 0276
steel strike (1919) 11: 0436–12: 0001
Public buildings
6: 0838
see also Federal protection of strategic
locations
Public lands
timber on 19: 0558
Public utilities
8: 0587–0636
Puerto Rico
1: 0468; 5: 0450
Radicals and radical organizations
activities 5: 0124, 0296, 0341; 7: 0470–
0515
African Americans 7: 0416
Communist activities 3: 0021, 0604;
5: 0450; 7: 0188; 9: 0289
general 6: 0436
investigation of 4: 0277–0592, 0804,
0948; 5: 0513–0792; 6: 0295;
7: 0470–0515; 8: 0513–0536;
9: 0001–0651; 12: 0225
involvement in labor disturbances
11: 0866; 12: 0001
propaganda 8: 0526, 0536
see also Industrial Workers of the World
(IWW)
see also Soldiers’, Sailors’ and
Workmen’s Council
Railroads
19: 0558
Rankin, Jeannette
3: 0641; 6: 0692
Representative government
13: 0953; 14: 0927
Retail prices
7: 0532, 0686; 8: 0002–0230
Riots and disorders
Arkansas (1919–1920) 3: 0511
Chicago, Ill. (1919) 4: 0113, 0129
general 1: 0305, 0662; 2: 0001, 0547,
0767; 4: 0159–0197, 0243, 0277,
0948, 0983; 5: 0019, 0028, 0124–
0238; 6: 0531; 7: 0188, 0293;
8: 0699; 9: 0289; 13: 0966;
14: 0046, 0252, 0495, 0775, 0970;
15: 0204
Lexington, Ky. (1920) 5: 0075
54
steel strike (1920) 8: 0511
see also Labor disturbances
Subversive activities
anarchists 3: 0311
espionage 14: 0051, 0330
Espionage Act 3: 0689; 6: 0109
general 3: 0194; 11: 0172; 14: 0051,
0333, 0782, 0835
of Germans 6: 0438
Sabotage Act 11: 0172
see also Insurgency
see also Radicals and radical
organizations
Supreme Court
13: 0953; 14: 0051, 0835
Taxation
2: 0823
Telecommunications
1: 0146, 0193
Telephones and telephone industry
patent cases 16: 0275; 17: 0630;
18: 0001
Tennessee
Chattanooga 4: 0070, 0091
Knoxville 5: 0028
Territories of the U.S.
general 1: 0057–0111, 0142, 0154–
0204, 0245, 0256, 0263, 0293,
0356, 0387, 0468, 0579–0607
Puerto Rico 1: 0468; 5: 0450
Texas
5: 0976; 6: 0001
Ticket stubs
19: 0211
Treaties and conventions
2: 0876
Trials
Mickle, Ivie 5: 0976
Trotter, William
7: 0416; 9: 0289
Unemployment
3: 0380
United Kingdom
constitutional law 2: 0727, 0851
criminal law 2: 0917
general 6: 0438, 0518; 7: 0293; 9: 0651;
14: 0035, 0271, 0696, 0835
strike plans 6: 0518
United States v. U.S. Steel Corporation
trial preparation 15: 0686; 16: 0002;
19: 0003, 0098, 0447
U.S. Fuel Administration
6: 0536
U.S. statutes
Espionage Act 3: 0689; 6: 0109
general 1: 0006–0607
Sabotage Act 11: 0172
Virginia
2: 0098; 6: 0045
Vital statistics
mortality in major U.S. cities 19: 0558
Voting rights
1: 0237
War, U.S. Department of
1: 0006; 5: 0180; 11: 0172, 0334;
12: 0148
War Labor Policies Board
3: 0689
War Plans, White
8: 0526, 0536, 0584
Wars and military conflicts
1: 0006, 0142, 0508, 0526, 0662;
2: 0324, 0876, 0899, 0951;
13: 0953; 14: 0001, 0227, 0360,
0396, 0555, 0641, 0670, 0782;
15: 0001, 0110
see also Civil War, U.S.
see also World War I
Washington, D.C.
6: 0412; 16: 0248
Washington State
Centralia 4: 0063
general 6: 0047–0398
Montesano 6: 0404
Seattle 5: 0513–0792
Weapons
chemical 4: 0948; 6: 0531, 0536;
9: 0289
federally owned 4: 0277, 0804; 5: 0001
high-explosive 4: 0948; 6: 0531, 0536;
9: 0289
see also Military weapons
Western states
5: 0359, 0367
see also Arizona
see also California
55
Western states cont.
see also Colorado
see also Idaho
see also Montana
see also Nebraska
see also New Mexico
see also Oregon
see also Washington State
West Virginia
6: 0536
Wholesale prices
7: 0686
Wilmington, North Carolina
5: 0369
Wilson, Woodrow
10: 0710; 11: 0436, 0597
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
5: 0369
Work conditions
4: 0744, 0972; 6: 0692; 10: 0838;
11: 0436
Workers compensation
18: 0046, 0336
Work stoppages
see Labor disturbances
see Strikes
World War I
12: 0148
Wyoming
6: 0423
56
Related UPA Collections
The Communist Party USA and Radical Organizations, 1953–1960:
FBI Reports From the Eisenhower Library
Department of Justice Investigative Files
Part I: The Industrial Workers of the World
Part II: The Communist Party
FBI Files on Black Extremist Organizations
FBI Files on White Extremist Organizations
Federal Surveillance of Afro-Americans (1917–1925):
The First World War, the Red Scare, and the Garvey Movement
Newspapers of the American Communist Party
Radical Periodicals in the United States, 1881–1960
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service
Series A: Subject Correspondence Files,
Part 6: Suppression of Radicals
Records of the Subversive Activities Control Board, 1950–1972
Part I: Communist Party USA
Part II: Communist-Action and Communist-Front Organizations
The Strike Files of the U.S. Department of Justice
Part 1: 1894–1920
Surveillance of Radicals in the United States, 1917–1941
U.S. Army Surveillance of Dissidents, 1965–1972: Records of the
U.S. Army’s ASCI Task Force
UPA Collections from LexisNexis®
www.lexisnexis.com/academic