
Outspoken  Socialist firebrand, political activist  and labour organiser Eugene Victor Debs passed away on this day, October 20, in 1926..In the waning years of the 20th century Debs emerged as a working class leader, a hero of the railroad workers of the U.S and Canada. Aftr working for the railroad, first as a labourer and then a locomotive fireman, Debs went on to  lead the Fireman's union , assist in the organising of other rail unions and ultimatey organise the nations first industrial union - the American Railway Union ( ART). By the turn of the 20th century, Debs emerged as the leader of the Socialist party, and from there went on to assist in the founding of the Industrial Workers  of the World  (IWW) aka the Wobblies, helping to pioneer a fighting union politics that organized all workers, becomming the beloved figurehead of American radicalism. Debs story is the story of labor battles in industrialising America, of a working class politics grown directly of the Midwestern heartland, and of a distinct American vision of Socialism.
Eugene Debs was born on November 5, 1855, in Terre Haute, Indiana to 
parents Jean Daniel and Marguerite Marie Bettrich Debs, who both 
immigrated to the United States from Colmar, Alsace, France. and operated aa grocery store. He dropped 
out of High School at the age of 14 to work as a painter. He did several
 jobs such as boilerman and grocery clerk. 
In 
1875 he was elected secretary of the Terre Haute lodge of the 
Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen. His intelligence and commitment, 
coupled with his conservative outlook (he argued against participation 
in the nationwide railroad strikes of 1877), attracted the attention of 
the brotherhood’s leaders. By 1881, he was national secretary of the 
brotherhood, increasingly its spokesman on labor issues, and its most 
tireless organizer. Simultaneously, Debs entered politics as a 
Democratic candidate for city clerk in 1879 when only 23. First elected over 
Republican and Greenback-Labor party candidates, Debs was overwhelmingly
 reelected in 1881. Four years later, he was elected to the Indiana 
State Assembly with broad support from the wards of Terre Haute’s 
workers and businessmen.  Debs organized the American Railway Union, which waged a 
strike against the Pullman Company of Chicago in 1894
During the 1880s Debs’s ideas began to change. At first a firm proponent
 of organization of workers by their separate crafts, he resisted the 
industrial organization implicit in the efforts of the Knights of Labor
 and ordered his members to report to work during the Knights’ 1885 
strike against the southwestern railroads. But his year-long involvement
 (1888-1889) in the strike against the Chicago,
 Burlington, and Quincy Railroad altered these views. He now thought 
craft organization divisive, a hindrance to working people’s efforts to 
secure fair wages and working conditions. And concentrated corporate 
power, he argued, had a debilitating effect on the political rights and 
economic opportunity of the majority of Americans. By 1893 he had 
resigned his position as secretary of the brotherhood and begun 
organizing an industrial union of railroad workers, the American Railway
 Union (aru).
The  1894 strike against the Pullman Company of Chicago marked a 
second turning point in Debs’s thinking. Pullman Palace Car Company, was  the largest railway car company in the United States at the time, George Pullman the owner had a business plan that was, if nothing else, creative. He 
built a company town around his factory in Illinois, named it after 
himself and made it a requirement that the workers live there (and pay 
rent to their employer, guess who?). Some historians have said of the 
town of Pullman (now a suburb of Chicago), that it was "a version of the
 Indian reservation system.
 The ARU, even before its first convention, was besieged with reports 
from Pullman as to the unfairnesses of the company towards its employees
 including a unilateral; 25% cut in wages in 1893, while all of the 
world reeled from a great economic depression. This, in spite of a 
discreet increase in the annual dividend payment Pullman sent to his 
stockholders. 

The
 workers at Pullman contacted the ARU and Debs paid the town a visit. 
With Debs in command, the ARU agreed with the suggestion made by Pullman
 workers, and called for a boycott of all trains in America pulling 
Pullman cars. It was a risky move but the ARU fell behind its new 
members from Pullman. Train traffic in and out of Chicago collapsed almost immediately. The
 press, owned by smaller tycoons, came out in Pullman's side calling 
Debs a "dictator" and "King Debs". The New York Times called Debs "an enemy of the human race".
 The cover of the popular magazine, Harper's Weekly had an image of Debs
 sitting on an idle Chicago railway yard, wearing a crown. 
Railroad owners hired security firms to break the strike and violence
 broke out. US President Grover Cleveland sent in the federal militia, 
railway cars were set on fire and inevitably, gun fire broke out. The 
courts helped out in issuing an injunction on this basis:
 
"… (that) the interstate transportation of persons and property, as 
well as the carriage of the mails, is forcibly obstructed, and that a 
combination and conspiracy exists to subject the control of such 
transportation to the will of the conspirators."
 
This led to Debs being arrested with other boycott leaders on July 
17, 1894, and jailed. This broke the union as Debs later described:
 
"Once we were taken from the scene of action, and restrained from 
sending telegrams or issuing orders or answering questions, then the 
minions of the corporations would be put to work..
"Our headquarters were temporarily demoralized and abandoned, and we 
could not answer any messages. The men went back to work, and the ranks 
were broken, and the strike was broken up, … not by the army, and not by
 any other power, but simply and solely by the action of the United 
States courts in restraining us from discharging our duties as officers 
and representatives of our employees."
 
Clarence Darrow signed up as Debs' lawyer and argued the case before the Supreme Court 
of the United States in March of 1895, to release Debs and his union 
brethren from their prison cells. The decision went against the union, with Justice David Josiah Brewer writing:
 
"A most earnest and eloquent appeal was made to us in eulogy of the 
heroic spirit of those who threw up their employment, and gave up their 
means of earning a livelihood, not in defence of their own rights, but 
in sympathy for and to assist others whom they believed to be wronged. 
We yield to none in our admiration of any act of heroism or 
self-sacrifice, but we may be permitted to add that it is a lesson which
 cannot be learned too soon or too thoroughly that under this government
 of and by the people the means of redress of all wrongs are through the
 courts and at the ballot-box, and that no wrong, real or fancied, 
carries with it legal warrant to invite as a means of redress the 
cooperation of a mob, with its accompanying acts of violence."
 
The unified power of railroad 
management working intimately with federal authorities  ultimately broke the strike but  Debs emerged from this experience as an avowed and 
committed socialist and dedicated himself to the start-up of a number of
 institutions now prominent in the American politics and international 
labor law such as Social Democracy of America, the Social Democratic 
Party of the United States, the Socialist Party of America and the 
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). Debs questioned the ultimate ability of trade unions to 
combat successfully capital’s economic power and, after the 1896 
elections, looked upon socialism as the answer to working people’s 
problems. 
As an  organizer he traveled the nation defending workers in their strikes and industrial
 disputes. Although many workers enthusiastically applauded Debs’s 
vision, sadly relatively few actually  endorsed his political program. n 1
In 1918, just as World War I loomed, Eugene Debs directed his very 
effective speaking talents at the federal government, speaking out against the war as soon as it began.;
 
". I   am for that war with heart and soul, and that is thee world-wide war of the social revolution. In that war I am prepared to fight in any way the ruling class may make necessary, even to the barricades." 
One  famous speech,at Canton, Ohio  later 
analyzed by the federal government, resulted in Debs being charged with sedition, he was charged with having:
 
"… caused and incited and attempted to cause and incite 
insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny and refusal of duty in the military 
and naval forces of the United States".
 
 These words meant he was convicted and even though he was 63, he was 
given a 10-year prison term (also disenfranchised for life meaning he 
could never again vote again in America). At his sentencing he told the 
court:
 
"Your honor, I ask no mercy, I plead for no immunity. I realize that 
finally the right must prevail. I never more fully comprehended than now
 the great struggle between the powers of greed on the one hand and upon
 the other the rising hosts of freedom. I can see the dawn of a better 
day of humanity. The people are awakening. In due course of time they 
will come into their own."
 
His conviction was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States
 who, again, ruled against him and upheld both the conviction and 
sentence.
Over time, calls went out that Debs be pardoned  bringing this remark this from President Woodrow Wilson:
 
"This man was a traitor to his country and he will never be pardoned during my administration."
 
Debs conducted his 
last campaign for president as prisoner 9653 in the Atlanta Federal 
Penitentiary and received nearly a million votes,  though he had been stripped of his citizenship. In his five campaigns as the Socialist Party candidate for president of 
the United States, Debs excoriated the economic exploitation of workers,
 including the then rampant abuses of child labor, with rare oratorical 
skill. He advocated for unions in all major industries and promoted a 
vision of socialism as grassroots economic democracy. In a deeply 
racist, patriarchal society, he was also staunchly anti-racist and 
pro-women’s rights.
Refusing to ask for or accept special treatment, he was confined to his cell for fourteen hours a day and was allotted twenty minutes a day in the prison yard. He wore a rough denim uniform. He ate food barely fit to eat. He grew  gaunt and weak. He  became an American folk hero, a principled advocate of free speech, and even as he grew sicker Convict No. 9653 refused to ask for a pardon.
On Christmas Day  1921 he was released without a pardon but with a commuted sentence. He was 66. But Debs never recovered from his time in prison  and lived most of of what remained of his life  in a sanatorium.  He died on October 20, 1926, at the age of 70 in Elmhurst.
 He is 
remembered as an opponent to big corporations and World War One. 
American socialists, communists, and anarchists honor his compassion for
 the labor movement and motivation to have the average workingman build 
socialism without large state involvement. He motivated the left in 
America and continues to this day. In the legacy of Eugene Debs there is much more than a speech here, a 
prison term there, and nor did he push the plow of labor rights by 
himself. But on countless occasions he said what had to be said, urged 
on his nervous union leaderships to do what was right in spite of the 
overwhelming force and might of the wealthy in America of his 
generation. In this, he always put himself on front lines and paid the 
prices that were collateral to his duties as a social justice crusader: 
jail, fines, ridicule in the press, but also the heavy personal cost of
 not just those personal injuries but also of being necessarily loud and
 alone at the front of a still unawares and very suspicious population 
as slowly, the American citizen became aware of the importance of unions
 and of worker rights.
Ten years after his death  later his beloved wife, Kate, was buried beside him. 
Debs was cremated and his ashes were interred in Highland Lawn cemetery,
 Terre Haute, with only a simple marker.  Today, his home in Terre Haute, Indiana has the designation of a 
National Historic Landmark, and a website 
http://debsfoundation.org/   dedicated to him Debs citizenship was finally restored in 1976, fifty years after his death and in 1990, the U.S. Department of Labor named Debs a member of its Labor Hall of Honor.
As a socialist, Debs denounced as irrational and unjust a capitalist 
system that created extravagant wealth for a few at the top, while 
millions of ordinary working people struggled to get by. Most important,
 he thought it was possible to build a new, cooperative society, to 
transcend the irrationality, waste, and greed of the capitalist economic
 system, and to end wage slavery and all forms of social oppression. He 
called this socialism. 
 The life and legacy of Eugene V. Debs stands as a rich and vibrant 
testament to one man’s dedication to a liberated future. Indeed, Debs 
was an individual for whom solidarity with his fellow humans was in his 
blood. who used his  voice in defense of the common man, his legacy can  best summed up in his own words.:
 
 "Yes, I am my brother's keeper,"
 he wrote. "I am under a moral obligation to him that is inspired, not 
by maudlin sentimentality, but by the higher duty I owe myself." 
As a principled left-wing socialist, Debs was cut from a different cloth
 than most mainstream politicians, then and now. How many career 
politicians today would be willing to go to prison for their views and 
ideals. In short Debs  is a socialist icon that we  so need  in our present times.