Ten
demonstrators were killed by police bullets during the "Little Steel
Strike" of 1937. When several smaller steelmakers, including Republic
Steel, refused to follow the lead of U.S. Steel (Big Steel) by signing a
union contract, a strike was called by the Steel Workers Organizing
Committee (SWOC) of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO).
As a show of support, hundreds of SWOC sympathizers from all around
Chicago gathered on Memorial Day at Sam's Place, where the SWOC had its
strike headquarters. After a round of speeches, the crowd began a march
across the prairie and toward the Republic Steel mill. They were stopped
midway by a formation of Chicago police. While demonstrators in front
were arguing for their right to proceed, police fired into the crowd and
pursued the people as they fled. Mollie West, a Typographical Union
Local 16 member and a youthful demonstrator at the time, still recalls
the command addressed to her: "Get off the field, or I'll put a bullet
in your back."
The sculpture was created by Ed Blazak, a former employee of the
Republic Steel company. It was originally sited on the property of
Republic Steel near Burley.Ave. The sculpture, with its ten steel
pipes, represent the smoke stakes of the ten steel mills within the
area, now closed. They can also be Representative of the slain ten
demonstrators.
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