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Vincent R. Dunne

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Vincent R. Dunne
Trotskyist and union organizer.
Dunnec. 1970
Born
Vincent Raymond Dunne

(1889-04-17)April 17, 1889
DiedFebruary 17, 1970(1970-02-17) (aged 80)
Occupation(s)Union organizer, teamster
Organization(s)International Brotherhood of Teamsters
Industrial Workers of the World
Political partySocialist Workers Party
Communist League of America
Communist Party of America
MovementTrotskyism
Criminal chargeSedition (under theSmith Act)
SpouseJennie Holme
ChildrenRaymond Vincent Jr.
Jeanette Adele
RelativesWilliam F. Dunne (brother)

Vincent Raymond Dunne (17 April 1889 – 17 February 1970), also known asVincent R. Dunne orRay Dunne, was an AmericanTrotskyist,teamster,lumberjack, and union organizer with theIndustrial Workers of the World and theInternational Brotherhood of Teamsters. He is notable for his leading role in the1934 Minneapolis general strike,[1] his conviction and imprisonment under the anti-communistSmith Act, and his membership in theSocialist Workers Party and opposition toStalinism.

Early life

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Dunne was born inKansas City in 1889, the second of nine children.[1] His mother was the daughter of a Wisconsin shoemaker and his father, a migrant worker fromCounty Clare,Ireland, worked as a repairman for thelocal street railway. Tragedy struck early in his life when his father broke his kneecap on the job and his mother was forced to move him and his older brother to a farm by where her parents had settled nearLittle Falls, Minnesota, where they were eventually joined by his father after he had recovered. Adding to their hardships, their cabin burned down one winter when Dunne was six or seven, but they were able to rebuild with the help of neighbors. His father began to work again, this time as alumberjack and building railway lines. By then, Dunne himself was working for pay on neighboring farms driving teams of horses and working the threshing rigs.[2]

By fourteen, Dunne would leave home to work atlumber camps throughout Minnesota, in conditions he found deplorable. Moving further west the next year, he harvested grain inNorth Dakota. In 1905, he would go even further west toMontana, where he encountered theIndustrial Workers of the World (IWW) in lumber camps.[1] Dunne was immediately struck by the difference in conditions between the union lumber camps and the non-union camps back in Minnesota,[2] finding the bunkhouses spacious, comfortable, and hygienic. The union also proved a source for cheap literature, which Dunne, who had been forced to leave school to work after only five years, enthusiastically embraced, reading titles likeCharles Darwin'sOn the Origin of Species.[2]

During thePanic of 1907, large numbers of workers were laid off and Dunne, along with fellow workers of the IWW, travelled west toSeattle looking for jobs. They found themselves living in large camps of unemployed workers, where they begansoapboxing to campaign for jobs and aid to be provided to the unemployed. Eventually, a state road-building project was commissioned to provide jobs for some of the unemployed, but Dunne himself would travel south toCalifornia, where inLos Angeles he was sentenced to a road constructionchain gang that helped to buildSunset Boulevard. He moved on toLouisiana, where he helped to organize a strike among sawmill workers. The strike failed, but would lay the groundwork for the creation of the multiracialBrotherhood of Timber Workers. After a brief stint in Texas, Dunne would finally move toMinneapolis, which was a major IWW stronghold at the time.[1]

Dunne (right) on the cover of theDaily Worker, October 25, 1928

Once established in Minneapolis, Dunne began organizing teamsters with the IWW after becoming frustrated with the conservatism of theAmerican Federation of Labor (AFL). In 1914, he married his wife, Jennie. By the late 1910s, Dunne had drifted away from the IWW's organizing and more toward campaigning forEugene V. Debs and hisSocialist Party of America. The break was solidified after theRussian Revolution, when Dunne officially joined theCommunist Party of America. This situation would last for almost 10 years before, in 1928, Dunne became a victim of the "Factional War", when members of the party who opposedJoseph Stalin and supported the theses ofLeon Trotsky were purged. Unfazed, Dunne and his comrades formed theCommunist League of America (later renamed theSocialist Workers Party) in alignment with Trotsky'sLeft Opposition toStalinism.[3] Dunne was a vocal critic of the Communist Party after the expulsion of the Left Opposition, especially regarding Communist Party "raids" on Communist League-controlled front organizations and co-operative businesses.[4]

International Brotherhood of Teamsters

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Further information:Minneapolis general strike of 1934

By 1934, Dunne had been organizing teamsters in Minneapolis for twenty-five years and was called "the most effective labor leader in America" by Trotsky.[1] With his brothers Miles and Grant, he took effective leadership of Teamsters Local 574 and knew "four or five hundred workers in Minneapolis [...] personally."[5] During the strike, Dunne and his brothers dealt with espionage from police and private detectives, as well as personal attacks from local newspapers. Nevertheless, the strike would eventually succeed and teamster membership in Minneapolis grew explosively.[1]

Dunne's fate would change by the 1940s, however.Red baiting in the newspapers in 1934 could be deflected, but with American society in the grips of theSecond Red Scare, the Socialist Workers Party would find their offices raided and leading officials, including Dunne, accused of sedition under the anti-communistSmith Act. This was seen by Trotskyists as an anti-communist conspiracy between the FBI and Teamsters national leadership, represented byDaniel J. Tobin, who sought to eliminate the leadership of the radical Minneapolis local.[2] Dunne and the other SWP leadership were found guilty, and in 1943 he was imprisoned for sixteen months in theSandstone federal prison along with other leading American Trotskyists such asJames P. Cannon.[6]

Later life

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After his release from prison, Dunne would unsuccessfully run formayor of Minneapolis in 1943 and 1947, and would go on three national speaking tours, as well as serving as a long-time chairman of the Socialist Workers Party in Minnesota. His later life was marked by his fierce opposition to theVietnam War. He died in 1970.

References

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  1. ^abcdefWitek, Anja."Dunne, Vincent Raymond (1889-1970)".MNopedia.Minnesota Historical Society. Retrieved12 December 2016.
  2. ^abcdRing, Harry (4 May 1959)."Interview with a Twentieth Century Pioneer".The Militant.New York. Retrieved6 December 2016.
  3. ^Palmer, Bryan D."Red Teamsters".Jacobin. Retrieved21 December 2016.
  4. ^Dunne, Vincent R. (7 December 1929)."Stalinists Raid the Co-ops – The Party Wins Another "Victory" in Superior".The Militant.New York. Retrieved22 December 2016.
  5. ^Walker, Charles Rumford (2005) [1937].American City: A Rank and File History of Minneapolis.University of Minnesota Press.ISBN 978-0-8166-4607-4.
  6. ^"Minnesota: Sedition?".Time. 17 January 1944. Retrieved22 December 2016.

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