User:John Reid/Reece

''This is a workpage for an eventual article: Which Side Are You On?. Note that some of this material may be copyrighted; source only.''

Florence Reece (1931)

Harlan County, Kentucky

Lyrics Lyrics

Bloody Harlan

recorded by the Almanac Singers (1941) Talking Union Keynote K 302 A (Keynote album 106), July 1941 The actual original can be found at this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nzudto-FA5Y&feature=related

In 1931, coal miners in Harlan County were on strike. Armed company deputies roamed the countryside, terrorizing the mining communities, looking for union leaders to beat, jail, or kill. But coal miners, brought up lean and hard in the Kentucky mountain country, knew how to fight back, and heads were bashed and bullets fired on both sides in Bloody Harlan.

It was this kind of class war -- the mine owners and their hired deputies on one side, and the independent, free-wheeling Kentucky coal-miners on the other -- that provided the climate for Florence Reece's "Which Side Are You On?" In it she captured the spirit of her times with blunt eloquence.

Mrs. Reece wrote from personal experience. Her husband, Sam, was one of the union leaders, and Sheriff J. H. Blair and his men came to her house in search of him when she was alone with her seven children. They ransacked the whole house and then kept watch outside, ready to shoot Sam down if he returned.

One day during this tense period Mrs. Reece tore a sheet from a wall calendar and wrote the words to "Which Side Are You On?" The simple form of the song made it easy to adapt for use in other strikes, and many different versions have circulated.

Edith Fowke and Joe Glazer, Songs of Work and Protest, New York, NY, 1973, p. 55.

Come all you good workers, Good news to you I'll tell Of how the good old union Has come in here to dwell.

CHORUS: Which side are you on? Which side are you on? Which side are you on? Which side are you on?

My dady was a miner, And I'm a miner's son, And I'll stick with the union 'Til every battle's won.

They say in Harlan County There are no neutrals there. You'll either be a union man Or a thug for J. H. Blair.

Oh workers can you stand it? Oh tell me how you can? Will you be a lousy scab Or will you be a man?

Don't scab for the bosses, Don't listen to their lies. Us poor folks haven't got a chance Unless we organize.

My daddy was a miner He's in the air and sun But he'll stick with the Union 'Til every battle's won

My daddy was a miner He's now in the air and sun He'll be with you fellow workers Until the battle's won



to the tune of an old Baptist hymn

book
Which Side Are You On? The Harlan County Coal Miners, 1931-39 John W. Hevener

U of Illinois Press