In the early 2000s, Son Tony went to college at a university three hours northeast of St. Louis. There were two routes that would get us there. One went north and then east; the second took us east and then north.
Whenever I took the north/east route (or came home via that way) I would see a brown tourist sign advertising the presence of the Mother Jones monument at the Mt. Olive exit. I knew that was a left-leaning magazine. The internet was much less robust back then, but I was able to learn that Mother Jones the person had some type of connection to union activity. I always thought about detouring to see the monument, but it was never convenient, and after Son Tony graduated there was little reason to go that direction.
However, when Hubby Tony made our recent trip to Chicago one of the Route 66 attractions we stopped at was only a couple of miles from that Mother Jones monument. I was able to cross it off of my list of things to visit.
Mary Harris Jones (AKA Mother Jones) was a labor organizer and activist who co-founded the Labor unionist trade union the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW, collqually named the Wobblies). She is buried in the Union Miners Cemetery alongside eight miners who died in the 1898 Battle of Virden mining riot.
We followed the signs that led to the Union Miners Cemetery, parked the car,
and walked towards the monument at the back of the cemetery. The monument had
an oval bas-relief portrait of Mother Jones flanked by two miners dressed in
their work clothes. (One of the miners had a cloth bandana tied around his
neck, which was a nice added touch by someone.)
In front of the monument was the grave and tombstone of Mother Jones.
There was no one else in the cemetery, and it was very peaceful. Tony and I read the placards, but we didn't linger. The day was hot and the sun intense.
This was very interesting! Thx. I think I may do a bit more digging on Mother Jones. She lived to be 100 is in itself unbelievable for the times.
ReplyDeleteI think you would find her life fascinating, and I agree with you about her longevity.
DeleteThat was interesting. Thanks for sharing. I wouldn’t have known that before.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome!
DeleteGod bless workers
ReplyDeleteAmen!
DeleteThe workers of America, who keep everything going, often for very low pay. Bless Mother Jones for caring about them.
ReplyDeleteSome things have changed in the decades since she died. Many haven't.
DeleteMother Jones was/is a true American hero. I enjoyed this post and seeing her gravesite very much, thanks for sharing it! I used to read "Mother Jones" magazine faithfully in the '80s and '90s. I see the magazine is still published in print and digital form six times per year: motherjones.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link. I'm going to go check out what they've got there.
DeleteHow interesting. Meaningful people are forgotten too soon.
ReplyDeleteI agree.
DeleteAs someone who always enjoys learning something new, this post about Mother Jones was very interesting. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. I love how we learn from each other on the internet.
DeleteThis was all new to me. Thank you. More people should know.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I was able to share the information.
DeleteI was going to mention motherjones.com and the magazine but Deb beat me to it. I used to get the magazine and still get occasional requests from them to sign up again.
ReplyDeleteAs I replied to Debra I'm headed off to their website.
DeleteThis is one of the things that I enjoy about blogging. I learn so much from reading my friend's blogs. I'm not familiar with this so I will be googling more.
ReplyDeleteYour post inspired me to feature Mother Jones on my Beautiful Woman of the Day blog, thanks! Here's the link:
ReplyDeletehttps://bwotday.blogspot.com/2024/09/mother-jones.html
I was excited when I saw her there!
Delete