The too-large-for-life longshore leader Harry Bridges
Harry Bridges, president of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU), addresses a mass meeting in San Francisco asking for a boycott to send a message to segregationist Alabama Gov. George Wallace, March 10, 1965. He said that each local of his union would vote on a resolution declaring that the union members would 'refuse to handle any goods or merchandise from Alabama, coming across the docks or through the warehouses, until the rights of all the people of Alabama are recognized and fully protected.' | AP

Bob Cherney, the veteran labor historian at San Francisco State, close to his subject, fell seriously ill a decade ago but happily recovered. Through the process, his new book, Harry Bridges: Labor Radical, Labor Legend, has been more than 20 years in the making. His subject, notorious for smoking cigarettes madly and through some parts of his life also drinking heavily, had become a legend long before his passing.

Who else in labor, apart from outright gangsters and the more numerous corrupt bigshots, had successfully evaded prosecution by U.S. administrations and the FBI for generations? Whose faithful dominions could shut down a port in hours? Or propel the Hawaiian labor movement from weakness to strength? The list of plaudits is long and, safe to say, was bitterly resented by AFL chiefs until Harry’s dying days.

It’s a fine saga, never before told fully or with such a sense for the subject. Alfred Renton Bridges, born at the turn of the 20th century to an upper-middle-class family in a suburb of Melbourne, had every good reason to take the easy path upward. But the sharp rise of the Australian Labor Party offered the world something new: the world’s first governing social democratic party, urging nationalization of monopolies (also urging racist policies on non-white immigrants).

An avid reader seeking adventure, Harry took to the seas. Experiencing the brutality normalized by the sea trade, he joined the Industrial Workers of the World in 1921 in New Orleans. Traveling to San Francisco the next year and applying for U.S. citizenship (he lied about his age, providing grounds later on to deport him), he was ready for action.

The degradations of portside workers were notorious, the corruption of craft union officials legendary. Worst of all was the “Blue Book,” San Francisco’s variant of the “American Plan” of the 1920s to break unions or render them toothless. Longshoremen lived in a world of casual and often brutal, dangerous labor, each day uncertain.

Like some of the other labor radicals around him, Bridges joined the “red” Marine Workers International Union in 1932 and became one of the editors of the Waterfront Worker, which circulated within the conservative International Longshoremen’s Association. Early on, and definitely influenced by Communist national policies, Bridges and other activists pressed the issue of racial equality, an important step in a marine industry where race lines had been and often continued to be crucial.

The longshore strike that became the San Francisco General Strike of 1934 reset calculations on all sides. Conservative labor leaders, opposing the strike, stood discredited. Communists, well placed, self-sacrificing, and effective, emerged triumphant but (unlike European communists) unwilling to make their own influence public. The Roosevelt administration wanted no outright class warfare, and the Bay Area’s maritime businessmen’s leadership ultimately agreed to terms. Harry Bridges emerged triumphant.

Bridge’s influence and that of the newly organized ILWU spread rapidly, and this despite bitter opposition from AFL conservatives, including East Coast longshore officials and the Seamen’s Union of the Pacific (known best for its occasional militancy and its determined exclusion of non-whites). Bridges rose with the CIO, and the CIO in California rose with him.

Charney, spending months in the Moscow archives, seems to have determined that Bridges used the Communist Party far more effectively than the reverse, in a relationship quietly accepted on all sides. The U.S. party leadership had no choice, and if other left-wing union leaders became “submarines” by dropping their party membership, Harry wisely had nothing to drop. This became crucial in the first major phase of legal efforts to deport him, from the later 1930s until U.S. entry into war in December 1941.

Trotskyists most especially would rage at Bridges for enforcing a no-strike pledge during the war and would have a point (if they needed one) in the ILWU’s seeming indifference to the AFL-led Oakland General Strike in 1945. Bridges shrewdly declined to oppose the Marshall Plan and gave only tepid support to Henry Wallace in the 1948 Progressive Party campaign. He was removed from the Northern California office of the CIO, and of course, the ILWU was purged from the CIO a half-decade before the merger of the two federations. Efforts by Teamsters and others to raid the ILWU mostly failed, and meanwhile expansion into further fish factories (up the coast from California) and the creation of unions in Hawaii made Bridges almost a Cold War winner.

Harry Bridges as a young seaman. | ILWU Archives

Aging and stress got to him. He was smoking like a chimney, as they used to say, taking barbiturates to calm his nerves during the 1960s, and after a failed first marriage and amidst a happier second one, had four children to support. Like Bridges himself, his faithful following was aging, and the “B men” working within the ships claimed they faced super-exploitation without ILWU support. Stan Weir, an old friend of the reviewer and an adamant Trotskyist in the lead of the struggle, was in part carrying out an old vendetta.

But in truth, Bridges had definitely worked out a relationship with Pacific Maritime Association, foreshadowing the later acceptance of containerization in return for good wages and retirements for those who remained on the job. From 1970 to 1982, he actually served on the San Francisco Port Commission, where many of the crucial business decisions were hammered out.

The Right and the Center made one more big effort to get rid of Harry. The House Committee on Un-American Activities hilariously charged that Berkeley’s political cadre, from local anti-racist demonstrations at hotels to the Free Speech Movement, operated as puppets of Bridges. Attorney General Robert Kennedy attempted to oust Bridge’s leadership by legal maneuvers, and successfully hurt Bridges’ prestige indirectly, thanks to John Kennedy’s support within the Bay Area Black community during the 1960 election and after.

And yet Bridges pressed on and on, helping to rally anti-war activists within the public and the labor movement, while remaining militantly in support of civil rights. By 1970, Bridges had created a modus vivendi with the popular San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto. After Bridges retired officially in 1977, members of the ILWU felt more comfortable placing him in the history of the union. He passed in 1990. The flags at City Hall went to half-mast, the ILWU shut down the ports for part of a day, and dignitaries by the dozens paid homage to him. The labor movement would not see his like again.

Harry Bridges: Labor Radical, Labor Legend
By Robert W. Charney
University of Illinois, 2023
504 pp., 20 B&W photographs
Clothbound $55.00; E-book $19.95
ISBN: 978-0-252-04474-8 and 978-0-252-05379-5


CONTRIBUTOR

Paul Buhle
Paul Buhle

Paul Buhle is the author or editor of more than three-dozen books. Formerly a Senior Lecturer at Brown University, he produces radical comics today. He founded the SDS journal Radical America and the archive Oral History of the American Left and, with Mari Jo Buhle, is coeditor of the Encyclopedia of the American Left. He is the authorized biographer of C. L. R. James, the Trinidadian Marxist journalist.

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