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PROPOSED RESOLUTION
A RESOLUTION DESIGNATING MAY 1 AS INTERNATIONAL WORKERS' DAY
WHEREAS, on May 1, 1886, more than 300,000 U.S.-born and immigrant workers walked off their jobs to demand a shorter workday; and
WHEREAS, the epicenter of the movement was Chicago where 80,000 workers marched down Michigan Avenue arm-in-arm, their cry: "Eight-hour day with not cut in pay;" and
WHEREAS, three days later, on May 4, 1886, a peaceful rally for the eight-hour workday and a protest against the previous attacks on striking workers by police were held at Haymarket Square; and
WHEREAS, an unknown assailant threw a bomb into the crowd at the rally, killing one police officer, and resulting in a violent confrontation which left six officers and several workers dead; and
WHEREAS, labor activists, socialists, and anarchists were blamed for the "incident," and eight men were arrested and wrongfully convicted; and
WHEREAS, four of those eight men - August Spies, Adolph Fischer, George Engel, and Albert Parsons - were executed in a grave act of injustice, and a fifth, Louis Lingg was found dead in his cell; and
WHEREAS, six out of the eight men were immigrant workers; five of them were born in Germany and one in England; and
WHEREAS, in July 1889, on the 100th anniversary of the storming of the Bastille, an international federation of political leaders and trade unions met in Paris, and the assembled delegates, representing 24 nations, chose May 1 as International Workers' Day in honor of the Haymarket Martyrs of Chicago to continue the struggle for a shorter workday; and
WHEREAS, on June 26, 1893, Illinois Governor John P. Altgeld pardoned Michael Schwab, Samuel Fielden, and Oscar Neebe - the three remaining men wrongfully prosecuted for "Haymarket Affair" or "Haymarket Incident," and
WHEREAS, on the first day of May of each year - May Day - millions of workers around the world take to the streets to continue the struggle for economic justice and workers' rights; a...
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