Today in Labor History April 12, 1934: The Toledo (Ohio) Auto-Lite General Strike began on this day. Initially, 6,000 workers struck for union recognition and higher pay. In late May, police beat an elderly picketer, infuriating the crowd, which began hurling stones, bricks and bottles at the cops. When the police had the fire department try to hose down the crowd, they seized the firehose and turned it back on the police. The cops fled inside the company gates and began firing so much tear gas and vomit gas (DM gas) that they were unable to enter the riot zone and make any arrests. Strikers continued hurling projectiles, overturning cars, setting them on fire. They used car tire inner tubes as giant slingshots to launch bricks into the company grounds. Later, the strikers busted through police lines and entered company grounds, engaging in hand-to-hand combat with the police. The next day, 1,300 Ohio National Guard arrived, leading to a five-day running battle between them and roughly 10,000 strikers. During the Battle of Toledo, the militia fired on workers. They shot tear gas, which the workers threw back at them. They attacked with bayonets and the workers retaliated with bricks, injuring several soldiers. Two strikers were killed and over 200 injured. The strike lasted for two months and resulted in a win for the union. It was one of the most important labor struggles of the 20th century. During that same spring, there were also General Strikes in San Francisco and Minneapolis.

The strike was led by the American Workers Party (AWP), a short-lived Marxist party that lasted from December 1933 through December 1934. The AWP also organized the unemployed, who were plentiful during the Great Depression, so that they would not scab on the striking workers. The AWP ringed the Auto-Lite plant with picketing workers to prevent strikebreakers from entering. Auto-Lite won a court injunction limiting where they could picket, opening up gaps through which they could get scabs inside. The AWP then instructed members to violate the injunction, leading to repeated mass arrests. Strikers and supporters packed the courtrooms, singing and generally disrupting the trials, leading to the release of all members. In 1934, the AWP merged with the Communist League of America to form the Workers Party of the U.S.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #generalstrike #toledo #union #militia #nationalguard #wages #police #policebrutality #strike #communism #scab

@MikeDunnAuthor do you mean, they organized the unemployed to NOT scab the strikers?
@blogdiva yes, thanks for catching the error

@MikeDunnAuthor we're too soft for that now. Because in the last several generations we have not - individually or collectively, in great enough numbers - experienced the hardships that led to the desperation these strikers lived.

I'm not looking forward to our enlightenment...

@AnnieG

They were living in the Great Depression.
So, yes, things were tough. But things are tough now, too. And perhaps in a much more existential way.

Fully 2/3 of U.S. residents currently are struggling to survive: https://www.investopedia.com/living-paycheck-to-paycheck-youre-not-alone-67-percent-of-people-are-in-2025-11812027

The inflation rate has been so high over the past 5 years that U.S. workers would have to have averaged a 5% raise for each of the past 5 years just to keep up. Consequently, most of us have been experiencing a declining quality of life due to inflation and stagnant wages.

On top of this, the safety net has been obliterated by Musk and Trump; the world is on the verge of another World War; People are going bankrupt paying for healthcare; housing is prohibitively expensive in most cities; governments supporting genocide; attacking other countries unprovoked; AI data centers raising energy bills and polluting the environment, threatening jobs and exacerbating the violence of war; and a climate crisis spinning out of control.

I'd say times are potentially much worse and the need for large scale, protracted General Strikes much more urgent.

@MikeDunnAuthor oh, I'm not arguing that it isn't bad, just that the worst is still below a surface of normalcy. Also, despite economic problems that are increasing for many, I feel like there are some ways in which the different sources of news/entertainment/distraction/convenience in American life at all levels helps obscure misery, and also makes people unable and unwilling to examine how much worse it might get. More "keep you head down, don't make waves, it might all blow over" than "anything is better than this"
@MikeDunnAuthor and yes, I wish we were anywhere on the road to a general strike. Some time ago I joined generalstrikeus (https://generalstrikeus.com/), which as far as I can determine has had thousands of people creating churn on Discord for months on end with no visible (or otherwise discernable) progress... I'm not sure how much longer we can wait.
The General Strike

The General strike -the people united shall never be stopped. If we strike together we can make true real change. Sign the strike card today.

The General Strike
@MikeDunnAuthor I hope they've learned a lesson about using the Ohio National Guard against protesters.
well damn, I dont recall learning about this in public school. i wonder why 🤔