"Martelle's excellent book captures [the Ludlow
Massacre] with a journalist's flair for narrative and a
historian's penchant for making the necessary inferences
where they belong: on the page for all to see." -San
Francisco Chronicle
"Martelle juggles the myriad characters and the
conflicting accounts with flowing prose and a
straightforward approach...Blood Passion is a
necessary, nuanced examination of an era of
unprecedented domestic turbulence that eventually
sparked dramatic changes in relations between labor and
management." -LA Times
"Blood Passion is the definitive account of a major landmark in
the American struggle for social justice. And the way Scott Martelle
tells the story is splendid proof that history can both be written as
vividly as a
novel and also be documented with scrupulous care." - Adam Hochschild,
author of Bury the Chains and King Leopold's Ghost
"We must welcome this carefully-researched study of one of
the most dramatic, violent, and important episodes in the history of
labor struggles in this country." - Howard Zinn
Description:
By early April 1914, Colorado Governor Elias Ammons thought
the violence in his state's strike-bound southern coal district had
eased enough that he could begin withdrawing the Colorado National
Guard, deployed six months earlier as military occupiers. But Ammons
misread the signals, and on April 20, 1914, a full-scale battle erupted
between the remaining militiamen and armed strikers living in a tent
colony at the small railroad town of Ludlow. Eight men were killed in
the fighting, which culminated in the burning of the colony. The next
day, the bodies of two women and eleven children were found suffocated
in a below-ground shelter. The "Ludlow Massacre," as it quickly became
known, launched a national call-to-arms for union supporters to join a
ten-day guerrilla war along more than two hundred miles of the eastern
Rockies. The convulsion of arson and violence killed more than thirty
people and didn't end until President Woodrow Wilson sent in the U.S.
Army. Overall at least seventy-five men, women, and children were
killed in seven months, likely the nation's deadliest labor struggle.
In Blood Passion, journalist Scott Martelle explores this
little-noted tale of political corruption and repression and
immigrants' struggles against dominant social codes of race, ethnicity,
and class. More than a simple labor dispute, the events surrounding
Ludlow embraced some of the most volatile social movements of the early
twentieth century, pitting labor activists, socialists, and anarchists
against the era's powerful business class, including John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., and helped give rise to the modern twins of corporate
public relations and political "spin." But at its heart, Blood Passion
is the dramatic story of small lives merging into a movement for change
and of the human struggle for freedom and dignity.
About the Author:
Scott Martelle is a Los Angeles Times staff
writer, and a veteran of the 1995 Detroit Newspaper Strike. A native of
Maine who grew up in rural western New York, he lives with his wife and
their two sons in Irvine, California. Visit Scott's website at www.scottmartelle.com
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