On February 4, 1888, Spanish civil guards fired on a crowd of protesting Rio Tinto Company mineworkers in Zalamea, killing 13 and injuring 35.[1]
Background
In early 1888, Anti-Smoke League agriculturalists and Rio Tinto workers came together to protest the company practice of open-air pyrite calcination in blast furnaces.[2] It was an unlikely alliance, as the Anti-Smoke League desired an end to calcination, based on what the toxic fumes did to local farmland, but the workers understood its necessity and were willing to accept recompense in exchange for periods when smoke prevented normal work.[3] The anarchist protest leaders held that they shared more important long-term goals, however, of deposing foreign capitalist interests, and used the issue of fumes to stand a class-based opposition to Rio Tinto. Beginning in January, the Anti-Smoke League funded the militant anarchist Maximiliano Tornet, formerly of Cuba, to roil the workers to action, resulting in demands for improved pay and conditions. Other area anarchist groups pledged their support to protest against the company.[1]
Protest and massacre
At noon on February 4, 1888, several thousand rank and file—agriculturalists, anarchists, and mikeworkers—marched from Zalamea to the Rio Tinto town hall (ayuntamiento) to deliver their petitions to the mayor. While the mayor spoke with the crowd's representatives, the Huelva military governor and civil guards watched over the protest. The military governor's attempts to disperse the crowd only incensed it further. The civil guards, under perceived threat of mob violence, fired on the crowd, killing 13 and injuring 35.[1] Other casualty estimates vary widely.[4] One counts 45 dead and 70–100 wounded.[5]
Aftermath and legacy
Having failed in the protest's aims, a number of workers turned from anarchism to socialism for social change, though mineworkers would largely continue to associate with anarchism for another decade. The protest's leaders, including Tornet, left or were driven from the mines. Anarchism in the region returned to a more collectivist approach, with specific, targeted strikes rather than general strikes.[1]
Charles E. Harvey, who wrote a history of the Rio Tinto Company, described this protest as the only regional example prior to 1900 of anarchist action based on confronting class differences ("communalist" anarchism) as opposed to reformist actions based on unions ("collectivist" anarchism).[2]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d Harvey 1981, p. 133.
- ^ a b Harvey 1981, p. 132.
- ^ Harvey 1981, pp. 132–133.
- ^ Castillo Cañiz 2020, p. 50, n. 55.
- ^ Enders, Victoria Lorée; Radcliff, Pamela Beth, eds. (1999). Constructing Spanish Womanhood: Female Identity in Modern Spain. SUNY Press. p. 287. ISBN 978-0-7914-4029-2.
Bibliography
- Castillo Cañiz, Assumpta (December 12, 2020). "Violence Against Strikers in the Rural Peripheries of the Iberian Peninsula, 1890–1915". In Millan, Matteo; Saluppo, Alessandro (eds.). Corporate Policing, Yellow Unionism, and Strikebreaking, 1890–1930: In Defence of Freedom. Routledge. pp. 44–61. doi:10.4324/9780429354243-4. ISBN 978-0-429-35424-3.
- Harvey, Charles E. (1981). The Rio Tinto Company: An Economic History of a Leading International Mining Concern, 1873-1954. Alison Hodge Publishers. ISBN 978-0-906720-03-5.
Further reading
- Avery, David (1974). Not on Queen Victoria's Birthday: The Story of the Rio Tinto Mines. London: Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-211334-2. OCLC 1028903.
- Ferrero Blanco, María Dolores (1994). Capitalismo minero y resistencia rural en el suroeste andaluz: Río Tinto, 1873–1900 (in Spanish). Huelva: Diputación Provincial de Huelva. ISBN 978-84-86842-81-9. OCLC 32987790.
- "Current Foreign Topics". The New York Times. February 29, 1888. ISSN 0362-4331.
- "Rioting at the Rio Tinto Mines". The New York Times. February 6, 1888. ISSN 0362-4331.