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How the IWW Grew after the Centralia Tragedy

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Plus: Political Divisions Led to Violence in the U.S. Senate in 1856 On November 11, 1919, tensions

Plus: Political Divisions Led to Violence in the U.S. Senate in 1856 [] To ensure delivery of your JSTOR Daily please add daily@jstor.org to your address book. [] Weekly Digest [Web Version](36199/ct0_0/1/m?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] 36199/ct1_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S [] [How the IWW Grew after the Centralia Tragedy](36199/ct1_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] By Julia Métraux [] On November 11, 1919, tensions came to a head between members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and members of the American Legion in Centralia, Washington, at the first Armistice Day parade after World War I. The American Legion had been chartered as a patriotic veterans organization just after the war. Meanwhile, the IWW had opposed U.S. participation. In the end, four American Legion members and an IWW member were killed during the incident that became known as the Centralia Tragedy. Washington State permitted the police to arrest members of the IWW, which led, as one scholar argues, to the “repression of radicalism throughout the state and up and down the west coast.” [] [Read More](36199/ct1_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] 36199/ct2_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S [] [Political Divisions Led to Violence in the U.S. Senate in 1856](36199/ct2_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] By Livia Gershon [] The horrific caning of Charles Sumner on the floor of the Senate in 1856 marked one of the most divisive moments in U.S. political history. [Read more...](36199/ct2_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] 36199/ct3_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S [] [Don't Cry for Me, North Korea](36199/ct3_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] By Matthew Wills [] Western media outlets were obsessed with whether North Koreans were truly sad about Kim Jong-il's death. Why? [Read more...](36199/ct3_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] 36199/ct4_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S [] [The Shark-Fighting Brothers behind 20,000 Leagues under the Sea](36199/ct4_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] By Kristin Hunt [] In 1916, the Williamson brothers used their father's underwater photography device to film a fight with a shark, piquing Universal Pictures' interest. [Read more...](36199/ct4_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] ADVERTISEMENT [] Whether you're a new or longtime JSTOR Daily reader, we invite you to be a part of our future. Join our membership today—even $3 a month would mean so much. [Become a member.](36199/ct5_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] 36199/ct6_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S [] [In The Gay Cookbook, Domestic Bliss Was Queer](36199/ct6_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] By Erin Blakemore [] Chef Lou Rand Hogan whipped up well-seasoned wit and served a gay take on home life during the early-1960s craze for camp. [Read more...](36199/ct6_2/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] 36199/ct7_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S [] [Revolution, Lightning, and the People's Will](36199/ct8_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] By Kevin Duong [] From Public Domain Review: In need of an image to represent the all-important “will of the people,” leading French revolutionaries turned to the thunderbolt. [Read more...](36199/ct8_1/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) [] [] [] Contact Us 101 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10006, USA [daily.jstor.org](36199/ct9_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) | daily@jstor.org | [@JSTOR_Daily](36199/ct10_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) | [Facebook](36199/ct11_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S) ©2004-2021 ITHAKA. All Rights Reserved. JSTOR®, the JSTOR logo, and ITHAKA® are registered trademarks of ITHAKA. Interested in advertising with JSTOR Daily? [Contact us](36199/ct12_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S). If you prefer not to receive email messages from JSTOR Daily in the future, you may [unsubscribe here](36199/ct13_0/1/l?sid=TV2%3AeySUKcu0S).

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