Agnes Burns Wieck
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Agnes Burns Wieck (January 4, 1892 – October 22, 1966) was an American labor activist and journalist, described as "a Coal Field 'Hell Raiser'".


Early life

Agnes Burns was born in
Sandoval, Illinois Sandoval is a village in Marion County, Illinois, United States. The population was 1,274 at the 2010 census. Geography Sandoval is located at . According to the 2010 census, Sandoval has a total area of , all land. Sandoval is located at th ...
. Her parents were both born in Kentucky; her father, Patrick Burns, was a coal miner active in union organizing. She remembered accompanying her mother to ask farmers for food during an 1897 bituminous coal strike. She trained as a teacher and attended a course on labor organizing at the University of Chicago, on a scholarship from the National Women's Trade Union League.


Career

Wieck was a teacher for five years as a young woman. She participated in strikes by women workers in Boston and Philadelphia. From 1924 to 1930 Wieck wrote for ''The Illinois Miner'', and was its women's page editor. In 1928, she actively supported the presidential campaign of
Al Smith Alfred Emanuel Smith (December 30, 1873 – October 4, 1944) was an American politician who served four terms as Governor of New York and was the Democratic Party's candidate for president in 1928. The son of an Irish-American mother and a C ...
. During the Illinois Coal Wars, Wieck was founder and first president of the short-lived Illinois Women's Auxiliary of the
Progressive Miners of America The Progressive Miners of America (PMA, renamed the Progressive Mine Workers of America, PMWA, in 1938) was a coal miners' trade union, union organized in 1932 in Downstate Illinois, downstate Illinois. It was formed in response to a 1932 contr ...
(PMA) in 1932. She led a January 1933 march to the Illinois state capitol by the Illinois Women's Auxiliary, including 54 recent widows and orphans from the 1932 mine disaster at Moweaqua; she presented a petition to the governor. In August 1933 she was "dragged", "manhandled", arrested and jailed, after a PMA meeting was attacked by the
United Mine Workers The United Mine Workers of America (UMW or UMWA) is a North American labor union best known for representing coal miners. Today, the Union also represents health care workers, truck drivers, manufacturing workers and public employees in the Unit ...
and the county sheriff's department. She worked with
Thyra J. Edwards Thyra Johnson Edwards (December 25, 1897 – July 9, 1953) was an African-American educator, social worker, journalist, labor and civil rights activist, and women's rights activist. Pan-Africanist, and communist. Early life Thyra Johnson Edwards ...
to include Black women in the auxiliary's work. She was compared to Mother Jones, and a 1933 headline described her as a "Coal Field 'Hell Raiser'". In 1934 she represented Illinois coal field women at a women's conference of the International League against War and Fascism in Paris. Wieck moved to New York in 1934 with her husband and son. She was editor of ''The Woman Today''. She also wrote about racism in mining country for '' The New Republic.''Wieck, Agnes. "Ku Kluxing in the Miners' Country." ''The New Republic'' 38 (1924): 122-24. During World War II, she worked to get her son and other imprisoned
conscientious objector A conscientious objector (often shortened to conchie) is an "individual who has claimed the right to refuse to perform military service" on the grounds of freedom of thought, conscience, or religion. The term has also been extended to object ...
s amnesty and better prison conditions.


Publications

* "At the League's Training School" (1916) * "Ku Kluxing in the Miners' Country" (1924) * "Our Children's Ideals and the Splendid Program of the Pioneer Youth Movement" (1924) * "The British Strike" (1926) * "A Blind Man's Plea" (1928, about Paul Farthing) * "Mrs. Wieck Interviews Mrs. Brechnitz--or Trys to" (1929)


Personal life and legacy

Agnes Burns married labor activist Edward A. Wieck in 1921. Their son was philosophy professor and activist
David Wieck David Thoreau Wieck (1921–1997) was an American activist and philosophy professor. Career David Thoreau Wieck was born on December 13, 1921. His father, Edward A. Wieck, worked for the Russell Sage Foundation and wrote about miners' assoc ...
. She died in 1966, aged 74 years. Her papers are held in the Reuther Library at Wayne State University. In 1985, she was inducted posthumously into the Illinois Labor History Society's Hall of Honor. Her son wrote a biography, ''Woman from Spillertown: A Memoir of Agnes Burns Wieck ''(1991), published by Southern Illinois University Press. A 2015 radio documentary about Wieck aired on public radio stations in Illinois.


References


External links

*
We Were Not Ladies. We Were Women
' (2015), a feature-length audio documentary made by Gregg Boozell, about Agnes Burns Wieck and the Illinois Women's Auxiliary * Caroline Merithew
"Perplexities Enough": Agnes Burns Wieck and the Proletarian Maternalist Body in the Early 20th Century"
a workshop paper presented at the Berkshire Conference in 2011 * Caroline Merithew
"Navigating Body, Class, and Disability in the Life of Agnes Burns Wieck"
''Journal of Historical Biography'' (Spring 2013): 123–163.
"Mother Jones & Belleville Hell-raisers"
an exhibit at the Labor & Industrial Museum in Belleville, Illinois {{DEFAULTSORT:Wieck, Agnes Burns 1892 births 1966 deaths American activists American journalists American editors American pacifists People from Belleville, Illinois