Lewis versus Howat: An Analysis of Labor Rhetoric, Education, and Class Privilege in Early Twentieth Century Mining Politics

Who was Alexander Howat?

Alexander McWhirter Howat was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on September 10, 1876. At the age of three, Howat emigrated with his parents to Troy, New York, moving from there to Braidwood, Illinois, and finally to Crawford County, Kansas, where he attended public schools until the age of ten. He then worked in the mines until he was twenty-two. Alexander Howat, president of the United Mine Workers of America, District 14. Howat's activity in the mines soon lead him to membership in the United Mine Workers union. In 1902 he was chosen as a union official and was elected to the board for District 14 of the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA), covering the state of Kansas. In 1906 Howat was elected president of District 14 of the UMWA, retaining that position until 1914, he refused re-election due to charges of having accepted bribes from mine operators. Following investigation of this corruption charge, which led to Howat's exoneration, he was returned as the president of District 14 UMWA in 1916, remaining in this position till 1921.

As President he was responsible for the organization of a powerful and aggressive union which successfully defeated the Kansas Court of Industrial Relations, which was going to pass the Kansas Industrial Relations Act in 1920, which banned strikes, picketing, and the use of boycott in favor of a binding Court of Industrial Relations for the resolution of labor disputes The Industrial Court Law made all disputes between labor and management a matter of negotiation, taking away the right to strike, which was the only way that labors could make employers listen to them. The Kansas experiment in enforced negotiation faded into history when it was found unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court and consolidated with the Public Utilities Commission and the State Tax Commission as the Public Service Commission. This defeat came about largely because of Howat's challenging the Court, although doing so meant he would be heavily fined and forced to serve three years' imprisonment.

Howat and District 14 lead a general coal strike in 1919 and a strike against the Kansas Industrial Court Law to discredit it. After calling for the strike in defiance of the law, Howat was sent to jail in Girard, then in Columbus, and in Ottawa. The officers of the International United Mine Workers of America ordered him to call off his strike and when he refused, he was expelled from the Union in 1921.

Howat began a series of other jobs, working in the 1930s and 1940s as a Kansas state border guard, editor of a labor newspaper, and gaining employment as a city employee of Pittsburg, Kansas. Alexander Howat died in Pittsburg, Kansas on December 10, 1945.
 

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