Records, 1877-1907. [microform].

ArchivalResource

Records, 1877-1907. [microform].

Consist of the official records of the Socialist Labor Party from its organization in 1877 until 1907. Despite the fragmentation or paucity of some types of records, the collection as a whole documents many facets of the Party's decvelopment, organization, thought, and tactics, as well as its contribution to the labor and socialist movements in a turbulent era of industrial change and of social and economic stress in the United States. Records of the National Executive Committee include one volume of minutes (1889-1891) in German; five volumes of outgoing correspondence (1883-1892), primarly in German and English, with some letters in French, largely concerning routine Party business and including an inventory of letters received (1891-1894), which in turn includes a list of Sections organized and dissolved between 1891 and 1893, with notations on their nationality; incoming correspondence chiefly addressed to national secretary Henry Kuhn (1878-1906, bulk 1895-1899), much of which pertains to the mechanics of Party operations and includes discussion of Party philosophy and strategy, internal Party controversies, campaigns and elections -- the campaign of 1896 is particularly well documented -- Board of Appeals cases, strikes, publications, and editorial policies of the party press, organization and operation of the Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance, other labor organizations, agitation tours, national conventions, international affiliations, and Party finances; official ballots of the SLP Sections and the members at large on assorted questions of party policy and selection of party officials (1880, 1889-1904); official accounting records of the Committee (1881-1899); an agitators' date book (1896) containing itineraries of SLP agitators and candidates during the 1896 presidential campaign; and a list of Sections nad officers, ca. 1896. Records of the party press (1885-1904) pertain to the official newspapers owned by the Party as well as to other socialist-oriented newspapers which at times endorsed and advocated the principles of ths SLP. The nature of the files varies between publications, but includes some correspondence, lists of subscribers, accounts, and minutes. The Party-owned enterprises represented include the New York Labor News Company and the Workamen's Printing Company, which handled publication and distribution of Party pamphlets; DER SOZIALIST and its successor, VORWARTS, a German weekly edited by Hugo Vogt; THE PEOPLE, official Party weekly in English, begun in 1891 with Daniel De Leon as editor; the DAILY PEOPLE Committee, organized in 1895 to raise money for a daily newspaper in English which was issued and edited by De Leon from 1900 to 1914; and the ABENDBLATT, a daily published in Yiddish. Also included in this series are files relating to two papers outside Party ownership, the ARBEITER ZEITUNG and the NEW YORKER ZEITUNG. Records of the National Board of Appeals (1878-1900) (known as the National Board of Supervision between 1877 and 1896) concerns disciplinary action aken against Sections and members and includes official minutes (1879, 1899-1900); a letter book (1878-1880) in German and English; correspondence (1888-1899, 1893, 1895-1900), containing letters in German and Enlgish between the Board and Party officials and members, affidavits and testimony, and reports of the Board to the national conventions. Records of the National Conventions (1877-1904) include printed plarforms, constitutions and proceedings for most years for which there are files, as well as some correspondence, reports and resolutions for some years. The Conventions were called by a vote of the Party membership and met irregularly. Portions of the files are in German. Records concerning Party activities (1880-1905) include two notebooks kept by Party leaders W.L. Rosenberg and Daniel De Leon, and an assortment of newspaper clippings, mainly from socialist publications. Clippings pertain to the labor and socialist movements, and particularly to the activities of the SLP, including its debates, conventions, party philosophy, agitation and speaking tours and political campaigns. The records of State Committees and Local Sections (1878-1906) complete the collection. Massachusetts, New York, Texas, Washington, and British Columbia are represented through records of Local Sections of American, German, Flemish, Italian and Scandinavian membership. There are also incomplete files of minutes and correspondence of the New York State Committee within the period 1884-1902. Fragmentary as it is, this series does illustrate the varied international composition of the Party membership and the organization and operation of the Party on the state and local levels.

39 microfilm reels.

ger,

eng,

mul,

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7919028

Cornell University Library

Related Entities

There are 8 Entities related to this resource.

Rosenberg, W. L.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6dn5ksb (person)

New York Labor News Company.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6mq29gd (corporateBody)

Socialist Labor Party.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6b611kd (corporateBody)

Founded in 1877, the Socialist Labor Party (SLP) developed into the foremost socialist organization in the United States at the turn of the century and was the first American Marxist party to maintain its existence over a long span of years. From the guide to the Socialist Labor Party records, 1877-1907., (Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library) The Socialist Labor Party (SLP), founded in 1877, was the first significant Ameri...

De Leon, Daniel, 1852-1914

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w60v9555 (person)

Kuhn, Henry

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6812rw5 (person)

Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w66b1jc2 (corporateBody)

Workmen's Printing Company.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68128cn (corporateBody)

Ham, F.Gerald, 1930-

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61p5qvt (person)