Title: The Strike at White Ash Mill
1919, Pennsylvania. In the steel-gray heart of the coal belt, where the fires of the White Ash Steel Mill never slept, Black workers labored in the shadows. They loaded molten iron, inhaled toxic fumes, and received half the pay of their white counterparts.
Jonas Tillery, a former coal miner and son of freed slaves, had had enough. After a foreman struck his nephew for “talking back,” Jonas called a meeting in the old Baptist church basement.
> “They call us expendable,” he said. “But without us, this mill don’t spin. Not one inch.”
On a frosty November morning, 47 Black workers walked off the job, standing in front of the gates with crude wooden signs. “FAIR PAY OR NO PAY,” “WE BLEED IRON TOO.” The strike lasted 94 days.
They were harassed. Food was cut off. Fires were set at night near their homes. Even Black churches were warned not to support them.
The strike ended without a contract, but Jonas's words were picked up by The Crisis, the NAACP’s magazine. His photograph—a man in a soot-covered coat holding a child’s drawing that said “My Dad’s a Fighter”—circulated across the country.
Decades later, when union laws changed, Jonas was posthumously honored for starting one of the first Black-led industrial labor strikes in U.S. history. His story became the foundation of a workers’ rights movement in the South.
#blacklifematters #historical
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