Watson, Morris, 1901-1972

Dates:
Birth 1901-01-29
Death 1972-02
Gender:
Male
Americans,
English,

Biographical notes:

Morris Watson (1901-1972) was born in Joplin, Missouri on January 29, 1901. He ran away from home after one year of high school and joined the army the following year. After the war he attended the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts for one year, 1920-1921.

Watson began his journalistic career as a reporter for the Omaha World Herald in 1923. In 1927 he moved to the Denver Post . After two years he moved to Chicago and read copy for the Chicago Herald and Examiner . Later in 1929 he became a reporter for the Associated Press (AP) in Chicago, then in New York.

Watson's first union activities involved the Newspaper Guild labor union. He was one of the six reporters that organized the Guild in 1933. Watson served as treasurer of the Newspaper Guild of New York during 1933-1934, as vice president in charge of wire services of the American Newspaper Guild from 1934-1941, and as organizer of the American Newspaper Guild, CIO from 1937-1941. AP dismissed Watson in 1935 because of his active participation in the Guild. The National Labor Relations Act (Wagner Act) had recently been passed and a test case was made of Watson's dismissal. In 1937 the Supreme Court ruled that freedom of the press was not violated by the Wagner Act. Unions were legitimized by the decision and Watson returned to AP. He remained with AP for two weeks and then left by choice.

After being fired by AP, Watson was appointed managing producer of the Living Newspaper, which was a federal theatre project of the Works Progress Administration and was sponsored by the Newspaper Guild of New York. Watson remained managing producer until 1937.

In the early 1940s Watson was active in the American Labor Party. He ran for Congress in New York's 17th District in 1940 and was chairman of the Progressive Committee to Rebuild the American Labor Party in 1941.

Watson moved to San Francisco in 1942 to become the Director of Publicity, Education & Publications of the International Longshoremen's & Warehousemen's Union (ILWU) and editor of the union's weekly newspaper, The Dispatcher . He remained with the ILWU until his retirement in 1965.

Watson was married in 1927 and had three children. He died in 1972.

From the guide to the Morris Watson papers, 1932-1971, (Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries)

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