The original Labor Day parade was
held in 1882, in New York City. It was sponsored by the Knights of Labor. Its
organizers were two Catholics. Though not related, they share the same last
name. Matthew McGuire (1855-1917) was a machinist from New Jersey; Peter
McGuire (1852-1906), working in Chicago at the time, was a carpenter. In 1894
Labor Day became a national holiday and was set on the first Monday of
September.
St. Joseph, also a carpenter, is
associated with Labor Day in round-about fashion. The saga begins here in
Chicago where on May 1, 1886 a federation of labor unions began a campaign for
an eight-hour workday. A subsequent rally in our now trendy Haymarket area turned
violent when someone threw a stick of dynamite. Police then fired wildly into
the crowd. Four workers and seven police died. Seven workers were rounded-up
and sentenced, four of whom were hanged in November 1886.
In July 1889 communist leaders in several
European countries designated May 1st as Labor Day to honor the Chicago
Haymarket workers. (Illinois Labor History Society; www.illinoislaborhistory.org)
In 1956, to offset the communist influence on Europe’s
Labor Day Pope Pius XII (1876-1958) established May 1st as the Feast
of St. Joseph the Worker. Some U.S. bishops immediately asked to observe the
new St. Joseph feast on the first Monday of September in our country only.
Permission was granted. Nonetheless instead of the September date, the May 1st
date for St. Joseph took hold in the U.S.
Ed Marciniak (1917-2004), a Chicago labor
activist, saw in the two dates a significant difference in worldviews. People
in the U.S. “have never developed a strong class consciousness,” as did those
in communist-influenced Europe, he wrote. Working families in Europe drifted
away from Catholicism because Church officials there and in Latin America got
too much “in league with the wealthy against the poor.” By contrast, U.S.
Catholicism “has never had…a hostile working class.” (Since 1968 many Catholics
in our country have left the church behind. They walked away out of
indifference or lately in disgust, but not out of economic or political
hostility.)
An economic system predicated on “class struggle…will be inadequate and distorted,” Marciniak concludes. So maybe having two dates in our country (May 1st and first Monday in September) contains a hidden blessing.
(Learn more about Marciniak in Ed Marcinaik’s City and Church, National
Center for the Laity, PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629; $20).
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