alaska-yukon-pacific exposition – 1909 everett massacre/unions -1916

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Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

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Page 1: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909

Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Page 2: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Question to Consider

• What exhibits would have interested your character at AYP?

Page 3: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition 1909

• Washington's first World's Fair opened on June 1, 1909, and closed on October 16, 1909.

• More than three million people visited the fair, which took place in Seattle on the University of Washington campus.

Page 4: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Court of Honor and Arctic Circle

Page 5: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Government Building

• Wax mannequins in surgery demonstration exhibit

Page 6: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Forestry Building

Page 7: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Agriculture Building

Page 8: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Hawaii Building

Page 9: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

California Building

• Elephant constructed of walnuts

Page 10: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Alaska Building

• Gold!

Page 11: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Electric Lights

Page 12: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Geysers Used Hydraulics

Page 13: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Filipino Native Display

Page 14: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Eskimo Exhibit

Page 15: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Upside Down House

Page 16: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Vaudeville Acts on the Pay Streak

Page 17: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Esplanade at the Foot of the Pay Streak Midway

Page 18: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Fairy Gorge Tickler, a gravity-powered ride

Page 19: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Question to Consider:• What exhibits would have interested your

character?• Take a few moments to jot down a few of the

exhibits.

Page 20: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Possible Scrapbook Entry

• Write a postcard home to a friend describing your visit.

• Include how you got to the fair, who went with you, what exhibits you saw (at least three), and what the fair might mean to Washington.

• For the postcard face, draw one of your own or print one from the site.

Page 21: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Everett Massacre/Unions - 1916

Washington’s Workers• By 1900, most of the Northwest’s workers

were young single males.• Workers went from job to job. • They earned wages in mines, logging camps,

lumber mills, and farm fields and orchards.

Page 22: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Everett Massacre/Unions - 1916

• Capitalists were business owners who made money by hiring workers, usually at very low wages.

• It was workers against owners, poor againstthe rich.• The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW or

Wobblies) wanted to overthrow capitalism.• The IWW championed the concept of “One BigUnion” and the overthrow of capitalism.

Page 23: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Everett Massacre/Unions - 1916

• Unlike other unions, the IWW welcomedwomen and African Americans. • The union also gave dignity to unskilled

workers who were barred from other unions.• The “Wobblies” agreed to strike if necessary.• Workers fought for the right to speak freely to

bosses and government leaders to get safer working conditions and higher wages.

Page 24: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Everett Massacre/Unions - 1916

• Wobblies spoke on street corners and in public parks.

• Their “free speech fights” created muchsympathy for their cause.• In 1916 in Everett, a mill town north of

Seattle, Wobblies were giving speeches criticizing World War I and capitalism.

Page 25: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Everett Massacre/Unions - 1916

• Many were arrested, then repeatedlybeaten by police and vigilantes (men who take itupon themselves to punish criminals.)• To give support, a boatload of nearly 300 more

Wobblies landed at Everett. • As they sang union songs and tried to get offthe ship, they were met with gunfire. • Five workers and two vigilantes were killed.

Page 26: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Everett Massacre/Unions - 1916

• Seventy-four Wobblies were charged with murder.

• After a trial, the defense showed that no one could tell who fired the first shot, and no guns were found on the ship.

• The Wobblies were freed.

Page 27: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Questions to Consider

• Where does your character live?• What industry does he/she work in?• Is it the kind that would unionize?• What would be the benefits and

disadvantages?

Page 28: Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition – 1909 Everett Massacre/Unions -1916

Possible Scrapbook Entries

– Write a letter to the editor showing your opinion of the event. Include your opinion of the rights of the demonstrators and the actions of the officials.

• OR– Create a political cartoon that includes the

protesters and the officials and shows your opinion of the event.