Albert R. Parsons

The Pittsburgh Proclamation of 1883

Most

The proclamation of the 1883 Congress of the anarchist International Working Peoples' Association, taken from the English edition of Freiheit, 27 December 1890, by Johann Joseph Most.

Comrades!

In the Declaration of Independence of the United States we read: "When in a long Train of Abuses and Usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object, evinces a Design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their Right, it is their Duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future Security."

Parsons, Lucy, 1853-1942

Lucy Parsons

A biography of anarchist labour organiser and wife of Haymarket Martyr Albert Parsons, Lucy Parsons.

Little is known about the early life of Lucy Parsons. She claimed to have been born the daughter of a Mexican women, Marie del Gather and John Waller, a Creek Indian, and orphaned at age three. From there she said she was raised on a ranch in Texas by her maternal uncle. However, later research has pointed to the possibility that she was a slave in Texas.

Introduction to Albert Parsons

Albert R. Parsons, 1848-1887
Born in Montgomery, Alabama, Parsons fought in the Civil War. Later becoming a printer and socialist, his politics developed to anarchism, and he was an active organiser in the campaign for an 8-hour working day. During a city-wide strike in Chicago for the 8-hour day, Parsons addressed a mass meeting at which a bomb was thrown at police. He and four others - the Haymarket Martyrs - were framed and executed. 600,000 workers demonstrated at their funeral, and the world holiday May Day commemorates their deaths.
He was survived by his wife, fellow anarchist Lucy Parsons.

Links on libcom.org
The writings of Albert Parsons
The history of the Haymarket Martyrs and Mayday
Writings of Lucy Parsons
Biography of Lucy Parsons
Albert Parsons search results on libcom.org

Parsons, Albert R., 1848-1887 - Autobiography

Albert Parsons

Autobiography of the anarchist Haymarket martyr, Albert Parsons, written whilst awaiting execution.

ALBERT R. PARSONS, born: June 24 1848 -- Montgomery, Ala, USA. Sentenced: Death Executed: November 11 1887.

Parsons on the 8 hour Day

Albert R. Parsons, Haymarket Martyr and anarchist on the movement for an eight-hour working day in March, 1886.

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