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Joe Hill

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Become acquainted with Joe Hill, a true American rebel who fought for a vision of heaven on Earth. The definitive study of Joe Hill, labor martyr, proletarian folk hero and songwriter, "A man whose songs evoked the spirit of radicals who were the very epitome of guts and gall--angry. Now, as then, society needs such men and women. "--New York Times
A thorough, scholarly volume, this is the most complete factual account to date which also details Hill's personal life and experiences.

286 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 1969

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Gibbs M. Smith

8 books1 follower
For the publishing company, see Gibbs Smith.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Erik Graff.
5,167 reviews1,453 followers
March 3, 2012
My brother, Fin Graff, gave me this book for my birthday, he having noticed a proclivity of bursting into I.W.W. songs evinced by me and my associates since his early childhood. Indeed, this was so, particularly in high school, members of the more political end of the social spectrum of our group owning and learning the contents of "the little red songbook", much of which contained the lyrics of Joel Emmanuel Hägglund, aka Joseph Hillstrom, aka Joe Hill, Wobbly bard and martyr.
Gibbs, the author and, later, publisher, represented this as the definitive biography of Hill. Indeed, this work, being his graduate thesis, may have been so at the time. In any case, the book came out, rights were negotiated and a movie directed by Bo Widerberg came out in 1971 which I saw on television in Oslo in 1978. The money from the Swedish film helped Gibbs establish the publishing house which keeps this book in print.
For the rest, I'll let Phil Ochs' Joe Hill tell the story:
F Fsus F C (open D string/then back on 2nd fret)
Joe Hill come over from Sweden shores
F Fsus F C
Looking for some work to do
F C Am
And the Statue of Liberty waved him by
C (open D string/place finger on G st. 2nd fret/return)
As Joe come a sailing through, Joe Hill
C G7 C
As Joe come a sailing through.

Oh his clothes were coarse and his hopes were high
As he headed for the promised land
And it took a few weeks on the out-of-work streets
Before he began to understand
Before he began to understand

And Joe got hired by a bowery bar
sweeping up the saloon
As his rag would sail over the baroom rail
Sounded like he whistled on a tune
You could almost hear him whistling on a tune

And Joe rolled on from job to job
From the docks to the railroad line
And no matter how hungry the hand that wrote
In his letters he was always doing fine
In his letters he was always doing fine

Oh, the years went by like the sun goin' down
slowly turn the page
And when Joe looked back at the sweat upon his tracks
He had nothing to show but his age
He had nothing to show but his age

So he headed out for the California shore
There things were just as bad
So he joined the Industrial Workers of the World
'Cause, The union was the only friend he had
'Cause, The union was the only friend he had

Now the strikes were bloody and the strikes were black
as hard as they were long
In the dark of night Joe would stay awake and write
In the morning he would raise them with a song
In the morning he would raise them with a song

And he wrote his words to the tunes of the day
To be passed along the union vine
And the strikes were led and the songs were spread
And Joe Hill was always on the line
Yes Joe Hill was always on the line

Now in Salt Lake City a murder was made
There was hardly a clue to find
Oh, the proof was poor, but the sheriff was sure
Joe was the killer of the crime
That Joe was the killer of the crime

Joe raised his hands but they shot him down
he had nothing but guilt to give
It's a doctor I need and they left him to bleed
He made it 'cause he had the will to live
Yes, He made it 'cause he had the will to live

Then the trial was held in a building of wood
And there the killer would be named
And the days weighed more than the cold copper ore
Cause he feared that he was being framed
Cause he found out that he was being framed

Oh, strange are the ways of western law
Strange are the ways of fate
For the government crawled to the mine owner's call
That the judge was appointed by the state
Yes, The judge was appointed by the state

Oh, Utah justice can be had
But not for a union man
And Joe was warned by summer early morn
That there'd be one less singer in the land
There'd be one less singer in the land

Now William Spry was Governor Spry
And a life was his to hold
On the last appeal, fell a governor's tear
May the lord have mercy on your soul
May the lord have mercy on your soul

Even President Wilson held up the day
But even he would fail
For nobody heard the soul searching words
Of the soul in the Salt Lake City jail
Of the soul in the Salt Lake City jail

For 36 years he lived out his days
And he more than played his part
For his songs that he made, he was carefully paid
With a rifle bullet buried in his heart
With a rifle bullet buried in his heart

Yes, they lined Joe Hill up against the wall
Blindfold over his eyes
It's the life of a rebel that he chose to live
It's the death of a rebel that he died
It's the death of a rebel that he died

Now some say Joe was guilty as charged
And some say he wasn't even there
And I guess nobody will ever know
'Cause the court records all disappeared
'Cause the court records all disappeared

Say wherever you go in this fair land
In every union hall
In the dusty dark these words are marked
In between all the cracks upon the wall
In between all the cracks upon the wall

It's the very last line that Joe Will wrote
When he knew that his days were through
"Boys, this is my last and final will
Good luck to all of you
Good luck to all of you."
Profile Image for Stan.
159 reviews5 followers
March 18, 2021
A well researched academic book that mostly focuses on the trail of Joe Hill. It was originally published back in the '60s and the style of writing might not be interesting to all readers.
Profile Image for Ciara.
Author 3 books418 followers
November 1, 2008
meh. this book was all right. it's a very old (like over forty years) biography of influential union organizer/wobbly joe hill. it was hard to get into it because it had that 1962 font/book layout, where the text kind of slides off your eyeball without sticking & it smells like the desk at the library where you used to nap before slinging pizza at the food hall all night (just me? okay). i powered through it due to my interest in union organizing of the earlier part of the 20th century. maybe it's time for a re-issue.
Profile Image for Matthew Antosh.
38 reviews3 followers
July 26, 2012
This is probably the starting book for any serious researchers of Joe Hill's trial, although not really his life, times or ideals. Joe Hill's life before the trial get's a chapter, and the IWW's history and philosophy get a chapter, but they are more general overviews – it's obvious that Gibbs is more interested in the legal wheeling and dealings rather then social critique or stuff like that. Half of the books are footnotes and transcripts of the trial. I wouldn't call it the most compelling read, but its a good start for folks looking to learn a little about Joe Hill's trial.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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