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Seattle General Strike
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==Life during the strike== [[File:Serving Food Seattle Strike 1919.png|thumb|The strike committee set up soup kitchens and distributed as many as 30,000 meals each day. In the photo, a woman serves a plate of food to a striking worker.<ref name="Zinn368-9"/>]] A cooperative body made up of rank and file workers from all the striking locals were formed during the strike, called the General Strike Committee. It acted as a "virtual counter-government for the city."<ref name=b122>Brecher, 122</ref> The committee organized to provide essential services for the people of Seattle during the work stoppage. For instance, garbage that would create a health hazard was collected, laundry workers continued to handle hospital laundry, and firemen remained on duty. Exemptions to the stoppage of labor had to be passed by the Strike Committee, and authorized vehicles bore signs to that effect.<ref name="Zinn368-9"/><ref name=b122 /> In general, work was not halted if doing so would endanger lives.<ref name=b122 /> In other cases, workers acted on their own initiative to create new institutions. Milk wagon drivers, after being denied the right by their employers to keep certain dairies open, established a distribution system of 35 neighborhood milk stations. A system of [[food distribution]] was also established, which throughout the strike committee distributed as many as 30,000 meals each day. Strikers paid twenty-five cents per meal, and the general public paid thirty-five cents. Beef stew, spaghetti, bread, and coffee were offered on an all-you-can-eat basis.<ref name="Zinn368-9"/> Army veterans created an alternative to the police in order to maintain order. A group called the "Labor War Veteran's Guard" forbade the use of force and did not carry weapons, and used "persuasion only."<ref name="Zinn368-9">Zinn, 368β369</ref> Peacekeeping proved unnecessary. The regular police forces made no arrests in actions related to the strike, and general arrests dropped to less than half their normal number. Major General [[John Frank Morrison|John F. Morrison]], stationed in Seattle, claimed that he had never seen "a city so quiet and orderly."<ref name="Zinn368-9"/> The methods of organization adopted by the striking workers bore resemblance to [[anarcho-syndicalism]], perhaps reflecting the influence of the [[Industrial Workers of the World]] in the Pacific Northwest,{{Citation needed|date=November 2011}} though only a few striking locals were officially affiliated with the IWW.<ref name="Zinn368-9"/>
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