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TODAY’S LABOR HERITAGE POWER HOUR RADIO SHOW

Laurel’s Legacy, Fannie Lou & Joe Hill’s Ashes

On today’s Labor Heritage Power Hour radio show (airs at 1p today on WPFW; tune in or listen online here): We dedicate this week’s show to Laurel Blaydes (1952–2022)—singer, organizer, and former director of the Labor Heritage Foundation—on the week she would have turned 73. Co-host Elise Bryant shares reflections on Laurel’s artistry and why labor culture sustains us in hard times, before we hear Laurel’s 1981 Labor Solidarity Day performance of “Hold the Fort” with Joe Uehlein, Tommy Moran, and John Gower.

Then: the work, art, and voice of Fannie Lou Hamer—sharecropper’s daughter, timekeeper, Freedom Singer, and SNCC organizer. We spin the brand-new “Fannie Lou” from Baltimore’s R.J. Phillips Band, followed by Hamer herself singing Pick a Bale of Cotton.”

In our second segment, the Heartland Labor Forum talks with historian Marcella Bencivenni about Arturo Giovannitti—Italian-born union leader, poet, and a key organizer of the 1912 Bread & Roses strike—whose free-speech trial helped define labor’s voice.

Our third segment is the Labor Song of the Week: Otis Gibbs’ “Joe Hill’s Ashes,” and we go out with Laurel Blaydes singing “What Will I Leave” at the 2004 Great Labor Arts Exchange. 

It’s also WPFW’s Fall Fund Drive this week. If this mix of music, memory, and movement matters to you, please become a sustaining member and keep Jazz & Justice strong: give now at wpfwfm.org or call 1-800-222-9739. Thank you!

IN THIS ISSUE

TODAY’S LABOR HERITAGE POWER HOUR — Laurel’s Legacy, Fannie Lou & Joe Hill’s Ashes

WEEKEND LABOR ARTS CALENDAR — Power Hour, forums, WUFF screenings & more

LABOR ARTS NEWS UPDATES — Broadway Musicians Authorize Strike; Workers Unite! Film Festival launches; Paul McKenna releases CD

LABOR VIDEO OF THE WEEK — Cecil Roberts: “You must continue to fight”

PICKET SIGN OF THE WEEK —Kaiser Permanente workers in SoCal strike

LABOR SONG OF THE WEEK — Laurel Blaydes, “What Will I Leave”

LABOR ART OF THE WEEK — Chris Stain Gregorek

LABOR QUOTE OF THE WEEK — Fannie Lou Hamer.

LABOR POEM OF THE WEEK — When Fannie Lou Hamer Said

TODAY’S LABOR HISTORY — Billings freed; Salt of the Earth strike begins; NYC firefighters lost

LABOR HISTORY TODAY PODCAST — The Donora Death Fog

LABOR HISTORY QUIZ — Which strike target?

WEEKEND LABOR ARTS CALENDAR

THU: Labor Heritage Power Hour (radio/online)

FRI: LABOR Big Book Forum (Virtual)

FRI: James Connolly Irish Biopic 'We Only Want the Earth' - Q&A (WUFF, NY)

FRI: Rochester Labor Film Series: La Cocina (NY) (see trailer, above)

FRI: Doc Shorts - Forecast, Home From Work, Freedom Waders, Bev Grant (WUFF, NY)

SAT: 'Raise the Roof - Building Tenant Power In Syracuse' - Q&A (WUFF, NY)

SAT: Lilly - plus Q&A (WUFF, NY)

SAT: Heirloom, NOVA, The Last Newspaperman, Bang Bang, Gold Status (WUFF, NY)

SUN: 'Baristas vs Billionaires' - Starbucks Workers Unionize - Q&A (WUFF, NY)

SUN: 'Rosinante' Narrative - Precarious Work In Turkey, 'Gold Status' (WUFF, NY)

SUN: 'YAPS' - A Year In the Life of Five Young Opera Singers (WUFF, NY)

ONGOING:

Power & Light: Russell Lee's Coal Survey (DC) (Temporarily Closed)

Don't Stand Alone: Black Labor Organizing in New Orleans (LA)

American Labor in Print (MA)

In Camps, Under Trees, and Evicted (CA)

Deadly Deception: The Asbestos Tragedy in McLean County (IL)

Jim Brozek: Honest Work (WI)

Art of Labor: Off Our Walls (PA)

LABOR ARTS NEWS UPDATES

Broadway Musicians Authorize Strike: American Federation of Musicians (AFM) Local 802 members voted on Monday to empower union leadership to call a strike at any time amid ongoing contract negotiations with The Broadway League. Read more.

2025 Workers Unite! Film Festival launches: With the theme that “An Injury to One is An Injury to All,” this year’s Workers Unite! Film Festival launches on Friday, October 17 at the Cinema Village Theater in New York City. Featured films include Without Bosses, Sex Work - It's Just A Job, Lilly and many more. Click here for details and tickets and see video above for previews.

Come Join us in a Union Song: Paul McKenna, who’s been crafting labor and political music for over thirty-five years, recently released his first CD, Come Join us in a Union Song, featuring 36 original songs that tell the stories of the journeys, struggles, and acts of solidarity of working people around the world. His songbook is also available; email him at paulnmckenna@gmail.com

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@steelworkers: “More than 8,000 of our fellow USW members who work for Kaiser Permanente in Southern California are on a 5-day strike, fighting for stronger staffing commitments and fair wage increases that will help recruit and retain skilled caregivers.”

Cecil Roberts: “ You must continue to fight”

From Camp Solidarity in Matewan, West Virginia—the heart of the legendary Mine Wars—UMWA President Cecil Roberts reflects on the long struggle of coal miners to claim America’s promise that “this land belongs to all of us.” On the eve of his retirement, Roberts’ words connect today’s fights for justice with a century of labor history rooted in the hollers of Appalachia. Recorded live at Camp Solidarity on September 19, 2025, organized by the West Virginia Mine Wars Museum. Recorded/edited by Chris Garlock. 

What Will I Leave - Laurel Blaydes

LAUREL BLAYDES (1952-2022) sings "What Will I Leave" at the Great Labor Arts Exchange in 2004. (This recording is featured on today’s Labor Heritage Power Hour; 1p on WPFW). For 13 years Laurel directed the Labor Heritage Foundation during its early days when it struggled to establish itself as a non-profit arts organization. Laurel supported labor singers, songwriters and artists by promoting their work to union audiences and to the public. She helped build the Great Labor Arts Exchange into an annual event and organized similar labor culture programs around the country. Laurel performed in a variety of bands – the Mountain Laurel Band, Sassparilla and Groundwork. On Solidarity Day - September 19, 1981 - she sang for an audience of hundreds of thousands on the national mall. Laurel died from ovarian cancer in 2022; she would have celebrated her 73rd birthday on October 20.

What Will I Leave was composed by Si Kahn (c. 1993). Accompaniment by Joe Jencks. Photograph: Laurel Blaydes & Julie McCall. Live recording by Ellis Boal. Posted to YouTube by Saul Schniderman. 

Chris Stain Gregorek

Gregorek has been making working class murals and paintings for since the late 1990s. See more on his Instagram page.

“Nobody’s free until everybody’s free.”

– Fannie Lou Hamer; hear her sing on today’s Labor Heritage Power Hour; 1p on WPFW. 

Like this newsletter? Help us spread labor art by passing it along!

CLICK HERE for our complete labor arts calendar; look for our Labor Arts Calendar edition on Monday

TODAY’S LABOR HISTORY

1939

Labor activist Warren Billings is released from California's Folsom Prison. Along with Thomas J. Mooney, Billings had been pardoned for a 1916 conviction stemming from a bomb explosion during a San Francisco Preparedness Day parade. He had always maintained his innocence.

1950

Salt of the Earth strike begins by the mostly Mexican-American members of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Union Local 890 in Bayard, N.M. Strikers' wives walked picket lines for seven months when their men were enjoined during the 14-month strike against the New Jersey Zinc Co. A great movie, see it!

1966

Twelve New York City firefighters die fighting a blaze in midtown Manhattan.

When Fannie Lou Hamer Said

I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired 

      She meant

            No more turned cheek

            No more patience for the obstruction

            of black woman’s right to vote

            & plant & feed her family

      She meant

            Equality will cost you your luxurious life

            If a Black woman can’t vote

            If a brown baby can’t be fed

            If we all don’t have the same opportunity America promised

Mahogany L. Browne; read the rest of her poem here.

The Donora Death Fog

On this week’s Labor History Today: A visit to the Donora Smog Museum, where a six-day inversion in 1948 trapped toxic fumes over a Pennsylvania mill town and changed how the U.S. thinks about work, health, and accountability.

And, on Labor History in 2:00: The Mother Jones Monument is Dedicated.

The 1950 Salt of the Earth strike was against which company?

LAST WEEK’S QUIZ: Eight ranchers standing trial for the murder of Dolores Hernandez and Delfino Davila – striking cotton pickets in Pixley, CA -- were found not guilty by an all-white local jury. No one was ever tried for killing Pedro Subia. Read more.

SUPPORT LABOR ARTS!

Please CLICK HERE NOW to pledge your financial support to our 2025 program, which includes our annual Solidarity Forever Award, the Great Labor Arts Exchange, the DC Labor FilmFest and much more (check out our website for details!).

Donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. 

“Forgotten” onstage in Detroit; walking in Matewan (10/10)

Power and Light in a Dark Time (10/3)

In Camps, Under Trees, and Evicted (9/26)

Cecil Roberts Delivers Big Win For Mine Wars Museum (9/19)

The Gospel of Labor Art (9/12)

LHF brings labor arts to SEIU’s Dream • Rise • Organize in Tucson (9/5)

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