Mother Jones' part in the Colorado coal strike brought her to national attention. For the next few years, she continued her rigorous schedule of traveling and speaking. However, by 1920, rheumatoid arthritis, which caused painful swelling of her joints, and other unnamed illnesses had left her often crippled and weak. Despite her health, she spent the latter half of 1920 and most of 1921 in West Virginia supporting the striking miners. After recovering from a near-fatal illness in 1923, she fulfilled her long-held hope of writing her autobiography. The following year, she made her last public appearance; it was on behalf of dressmakers in Chicago.
Out of the public eye and in increasingly fragile health, from 1924 until her death in 1930, she lived with friends in California and Washington, DC. As a union organizer, she had spent her life on the road, moving between mines and factories. She had had little time to cultivate friendships, reflect on her life, or establish a permanent residence. Now, ill and unable to travel at will, she found herself with time to build friendships and think about her own needs. Yet, even after she was housebound, she followed the miners' struggles until her death October 30, 1930. She died at the home of her friends Walter and Lillie May Burgess, with whom she lived after several years with Terence and Emma Powderly.
This letter written by Jones in 1926 while she lived with her friends in Los Angeles, California, offers a glimpse of the woman in her final years. It reveals her continued concern for the state of the United Mine Workers, the miners and their families, and surprisingly, her need to nurture friendships that essentially replaced the family she had lost decades earlier. In this letter, she criticizes the men, among them Hugh Kerwin, who were supposed to help the miners, comparing them unfavorably to past leaders, such as Terence Powderly, former president of the Knights of Labor. Specifically, she was angry about the actions of these new men, regarding strikes in Anthracite and Scranton, Pennsylvania, and other locations. The men named were involved in labor in some capacity.
Hugh Kerwin was the director of conciliation in the Department of Labor. Terence Powderly, her close friend, had led the Knights of Labor as their president; Martin Irons had stood against the railroad companies as a regional leader of the Knights of Labor; and John Siney (misspelled Sinie) had served the miners as the president of the Miners' National Association.
Questions:
As you read the document, reflect on the following questions: