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14.02.11
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Father Thomas J. Hagerty:
A Forgotten Religious Communist by Roland Boer In the usual roll call of religious communists, Father Thomas J. Hagerty -- one of the central figures involved in establishing the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW, or the Wobblies) in 1905 -- seems to have slipped off the radar, with nary an entry on the Marxist Internet Archive and the smallest comment on the IWW website. As with many religious radicals, Hagerty sought to meld Christian commitment and radical communism.1 At the height of his activism in 1903 and 1904, Hagerty drew admiration from all with whom he worked. According to Clarence Smith, Secretary of the American Labor Union, 'Father Hagerty is without a doubt the brainiest and certainly one of the most eloquent speakers in the labor and Socialist movement in the world'.2 And he was an electrifying orator, as Eugene Debs, Socialist Party and later IWW leader, put it:
Yet, the story of Father Hagerty is a somewhat sad one: a short incandescent burst of radical activity for some three years -- 1902-1905 -- before disappearing into obscurity. His origins are similarly cloudy: he studied theology before becoming a pugnacious and active priest in New Mexico from 1895, serving in a number of parishes, saying mass, hearing confession, baptising children, burying the dead, before turning into a full-time militant in 1902. Addressing rallies for the Socialist Party, editing newspapers, writing articles, he put all of his formidable energy into grassroots activism. His crowning achievement was a direct and central role in the formation of the IWW. Hagerty had been one of the original six who had met in the autumn of 1904 and agreed to send out invitations to labour radicals in order to form a militant union. He was also at the centre of the conference in June 1905 that launched the IWW in Chicago. He was secretary of the union's constitution committee, helped frame the Industrial Union Manifesto, designed the most comprehensive diagram -- Hagerty's Wheel of Fortune -- mapping out the various trades and their relation, and he edited and wrote most of The Voice of Labor, the official newspaper of the American Labor Union for the six months of its frantic existence. Indeed, Hagerty is credited with writing the preamble to the IWW constitution, with its slogan that rang around the world, 'The working class and the employing class have nothing in common'. As quickly as he had come, he was gone. By the middle of 1905, Hagerty dropped out of political activism altogether and gave up his identity as a Roman Catholic priest, a status he had never lost during his militant years, despite church disapproval. One or two old comrades caught up with him in Chicago many years later and found him living in deep poverty, eventually reliant on soup kitchens, a few cents from passers-by, missions for a bed and free concerts to keep up his cultural interests. But what is so appealing about Father Thomas J. Hagerty? I am less interested in his usefulness as a priest who could persuade Roman Catholic workers to join the movement, but rather in his effort to bridge the antagonism between the church and socialist leaders. He argued consistently in his speeches and articles that the church hierarchy had no business telling workers how to think and act politically. In line with this position, he would often write that religion and socialism dealt with different spheres of life, that religion and politics had no truck with one another: 'It is as much beyond the scope of Socialism to deal with divine revelation as it is beyond the range of the Republican Party to advance a new exegesis of the Davidic Psalms'.4 'Socialism', he wrote elsewhere, 'is an economic science, not a system of dogmatic beliefs'.5 Given these two spheres, there was no problem in combining his Roman Catholic faith and radical socialism. However, at other moments he sought to bring these two realms together in a somewhat different fashion, drawing on the church fathers -- Basil, Chrysostom, Gregory, Jerome -- to show that socialism was consistent with their teaching. And in response to yet another round of condemnations from the church hierarchy, he responded that any priest who might vote for the capitalist system would make it perfectly clear that 'he has voted for the continuance of the very things against which his Master of yore thundered in the highways of Palestine'.6 In line with this sentiment, let me quote a hymn that Hagerty may well have known. It comes from the 1900-1930 era of Christian Socialist gatherings -- processions, rent strikes and May Day masses -- in England, led by Father Conrad Noel, the 'Red Vicar of Thaxted', Percy Dearmer and Basil Jellicoe. If he had, I am sure he would have sung along lustily. It is called 'God is the Only Landlord to Whom Our Rents Are Due'.
Was Hagerty's thought inconsistent? In one respect, yes, in the sense that the tension in his thought may well have played a role, along with sheer burnout, in leading him out of both socialist activism and the church. The fact that he fell out with the bulk of the IWW and fellow socialists through the sheer radicalism of his positions did not help matters, for he advocated immediate revolution, disdained democracy, the ballot box and those he called the 'slowcialists'. In another respect, the answer must be no; his two positions are not so inconsistent. They may have been in his own mind, but they do reflect an uncompromising honesty in Hagerty's effort to work through the relation between Christianity and politics. Let me put it this way: in many respects the wavering back and forth between complete separation of the two spheres of socialism and theology and his effort to see their connections embodies an ambivalence that runs through the long tradition of religious radicalism. For Hagerty could see that his own tradition lent itself all too readily to reaction and the support of exploitation; at these moments he sought to separate his socialist and Christian commitments. But he could see equally well that the two had a good deal in common. It is a shame he was not able to resolve the tension for himself.
1 Since there is relatively little material available on Hagerty, I am reliant on the excellent article by Robert E. Doherty, 1962, 'Thomas J. Hagerty, The Church, and Socialism', Labor History, 3, 1: 39-56. 2 Clarence Smith, 'Reverend Father Hagerty's Lecture Tour', American Labor Union Journal, January 1, 1903, quoted in Doherty 1962, p. 48. 3 Eugene Debs, 'A Valiant Foeman', Social Democratic Herald, August 15, 1903, quoted in Doherty 1962, p. 48. 4 Thomas J. Hagerty, Economic Discontent and Its Remedies, Terre Haute: Standard Publishing Company, 1902, p. 44. Hagerty preferred the speaker's lectern to extended writings. His other written work is Why Physicians Should Be Socialists, Terre Haute: Standard Publishing Company, 1902. 5 Hagerty, 'Thomas J. Hagerty to A.M. Simons', International Socialist Review, 3 (October 1902): 229. 6 Thomas J. Hagerty in the Social Democratic Herald, August 8, 1903, quoted in Doherty 1962, p. 50. Roland Boer is Research Professor in Theology at the University of Newcastle, Australia. Visit his blog Stalin's Moustache: <stalinsmoustache.wordpress.com>. |