Forgotten History Collection  


                                                  

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This documentary photographs are here as a witnesses of

peoples dissent towards the rulers and the system

throughout the history.

We placed them here not to support any political party,

but as an educational tool which should make us think

about the wide spectrum of movements and groups

throughout the U.S. history which goes widely

unnoticed and forgotten in school classes and

corporate media.

This collection will grow and expand with time.

 

                                                     

We would like to thank the Tamiment Library, at New York University, for allowing us to reproduce some of the images in this section, and the Labor Arts online museum for permitting us to reproduce text and captions associated with the images, which are also displayed on its website.   Please visit their websites to learn more about the history of radical politics: socialism, communism, anarchism, utopian experiments, the cultural left, the New Left, and the struggle for civil rights and civil liberties.

 

                      

American Labor Party Rally in Madison Square Garden, circa 1937.

 

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives             Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives     

New York City members of the UAW demonstrated their support [these days illegal]

for the Ford workers in Dearborn, Michigan who were involved in a

bitterly fought organizing drive among auto workers during the 1930s

[below] Assembling for a May Day Parade, New York City, 1934.

Another of the many photographs Nilva took of May Day parades in the 1930s.

The banners in this image illustrate the participation in these

parades of more left-wing organizations.

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives

 

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives

John Albok Langston Hughes sign at May Day Parade, New York City, May, 1933.

During the 1930s, John Albok took thousands of pictures of May Day parades.This one shows an interracial group of marchers carrying signs about racial equality. One sign shows a portrait of the "Famous Negro Poet" Langston Hughes, and quotes these lines from his poem, "A New Song": I speak in the name of black millions awakening to action. The Black and White World shall be one: The Workers' World." 
Another sign reads in part: "14th Amendment to the Constitution, Section 1: No states shall make or enforce any law to abridge the rights of citizens of the United States nor deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law."

 

 

 

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives               Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives            

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives                       Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives

 

Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives             Tamiment Library/Robert Wagner Labor Archives          

Charles Rivers, The Communist Party Headquarters at 
Union Square in early 1930s
Mass rallies supporting government help for unemployed workers were numerous 
during the depression, and many of them were 
organized by the Communist Party and other left and labor organizations. 
The building in the background of this rally houses the Co-operative Cafeteria; 
banners above the cafeteria read "Vote Communist," and "Unemployed! 
Fight for The Workers' Social Insurance Bill !"
 
 
Communist Party Campaign Poster, 
Presidential Election, 1928
 
unknown photographer, Union Square in 1960's
 
Maryann Auguste Koznar, Union Square in 2004
12
34
5
 Maryann Auguste Koznar #1-5 New York City Demonstration's 2003-2004
 

 

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