I
recently discovered a number of photos of Matilda Rabinowitz (aka
Matilda Robbins) at the Walter Reuther Labor Library at Wayne State
University, posted last year by an “eclemens.” Matilda was a
labor organizer for the Industrial Workers of the World who played a
key leadership role, along with Helen Schloss, in the Little Falls
Textile Strike of 1912. Those unfamiliar with that struggle of the
largely women workers of a century ago can see The Red Sweater Girls of 1912 or my novel based on the
strike, The Red Nurse. The
novel includes a chapter from Matilda's unpublished memoir shared
with me by her granddaughter, Robbin Legere Henderson.
One
of the photos at the Reuther library shows Matilda at work during the Little Falls strike,
probably in the old Sokol Hall on Flint Avenue which served as the
strike headquarters.
Another
photo shows Matilda with her younger brother Herman, possibly in
their hometown of Bridgeport Connecticut.
Here
is Matilda after being arrested for strike activities in Detroit, perhaps
at the Studebaker or Ford plants.
These
photos show Matilda with strikers from the Fort Pitt Steel Casings
Co. in McKeesport, Pennsylvania.
A
group portrait of participants in the 1913 IWW convention in Chicago
shows Matilda, the woman on the right.
The
Reuther site has this note on Matilda in a 2015 article, also by "eclemens," entitled “On
The Women of the Industrial Workers of the World.”
The
poet, feminist, and activist Matilda (Rabinowitz) Robbins was an
early organizer and a lifelong advocate and writer for the One Big
Union. She first became involved with the I.W.W. during the Lawrence
Strike as a volunteer, and later proved her mettle during the Little
Falls Textile Strike where she became the central strike organizer
after the other organizers were jailed. For 14 weeks she ran the
strike office, organized the daily picket lines and strike kitchen,
arranged for legal aid for the jailed workers, and recruited support,
with the help of fellow I.W.W. member Helen Schloss. For three years
following she traveled the country, organizing textile workers in the
East and autoworkers in Detroit, where she was jailed for her
activities.
The Matilda
Robbins Papers, contain
personal writings, photographs, and clippings and are a tremendous
resource toward understanding the philosophies of an early women’s
rights activist.
The
IWW – which still exists today – has this description of Matilda
in a piece on IWW women by Autumn Gonzalez, Nicholas DeFilippis and Donal Fallon:
As
a young woman, Matilda Rabinowitz traveled the country with the IWW
supporting organizing drives and striking workers. She may be best
known for her participation in the Little Falls textile strike of
1912, where she was able to gain the trust and confidence of a
diverse group of mainly immigrant workers, rebuild the organizing
committee, and reform a completely female strike and picket line.
While the long battle with the mill in upstate New York dragged
along, Rabinowitz organized for the children of strikers to be housed
by IWW-sympathetic families in neighboring communities, which
prompted further community support for the mostly-female strikers.
She also lead a legal defense fund for arrested strikers, going on a
months long speaking tour for those who were arrested in the battle
at the mill, raising money and awareness for the effort. Her
leadership was key in the strike’s successful conclusion.
Rabinowitz
wound her way from upstate New York to Michigan, where her
soapbox speeches began drawing lunchtime crowds of 3,000 at a Ford
plant, causing Ford officials to abolish lunch privileges. Ford also
had Rabinowitz and four other IWW organizers arrested for their
activities, but the damage was done, and autoworkers in the area took
the IWW messages to heart. Workers at a nearby Studebaker plant began
organizing and calling for the eight-hour day and weekly
paychecks—rather than the bi-monthly paychecks that they were
receiving—held a combined skilled and unskilled walkout on June 17,
1913. This action, considered to be the first major strike at a U.S.
auto plant, not
have occurred without Rabinowitz’s work. The fire spread to a
nearby Packard plant, where workers were attacked by police, but in
the end concessions were won on the paycheck issue, although the
eight-hour day would wait. The IWW would not gain a foothold in the
auto industry, but it proved to the union movement that both skilled
and unskilled workers in one industry could work together in one
union to fight the boss.