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JOSEPH A.
LABADIE BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
oseph A.
Labadie was born on April 18, 1850 in Paw Paw, Michigan, the
descendant of 17th century French immigrants. His
boyhood was a frontier existence among Pottawatomi tribes in
southern Michigan, where his father served as interpreter
between the Jesuit missionaries and the Indians. His
only schooling was a few months in a parochial
school.
At the age of 17 he began roaming the country
as a "tramp" printer. In 1872 he put down roots in
Detroit, working as a printer at the Detroit Post and
Tribune. In 1877, Labadie, an agnostic, married his
cousin, Sophie Elizabeth Archambeau, a devout Catholic.
During their long and happy life together, neither tried to
change the other's religious outlook.
Labadie joined
the newly formed Socialist Labor party in 1877, one of the
first two non-German-born Detroiters to do so. The other
was Judson Grenell, Labadie's collaborator in publishing their
first paper, the Detroit Socialist. As the
Socialistic Tract Association, they printed cheap pamphlets
explaining socialism, some of which they handed out free on
street corners.
In 1878, Labadie, who called himself
"Jo", was chosen by Knights of Labor official Charles Litchman
to organize Detroit's first assembly, L.A. 901. It was
camouflaged as the Washington Literary Society in line with
the organization's secrecy. Labadie also joined the
Greenback financial reform movement, ran an unsuccessful
campaign for mayor on the Greenback-Labor ticket, and served
as delegate to the divisive 1880 Greenback-Labor convention in
Chicago.
That year he also was instrumental in
organizing the Detroit Trades Council, a city-wide assembly of
trades unions, and served as its president while continuing as
an official of the Knights of Labor and Socialist Labor
Party. With Grenell, Labadie continued issuing a
succession of labor papers, including the nationally
influential Advance and Labor Leaf, and was a
widely-published columnist for the labor press, recognized for
his forthright style and originality of thought.
In 1883, Labadie abandoned socialism and embraced
individualist anarchism. He became a close associate of
Benjamin Tucker and a frequent contributor to the latter's
Liberty. Despite Labadie's outspoken opposition
to government, he was appointed clerk at Michigan's new Bureau
of Labor in Lansing, and served there a year.
After the
1886 Haymarket bombing in Chicago triggered an anti-anarchist
hysteria, which was echoed by Knights of Labor leader Terence
Powderly, Labadie became Powderly's enemy. He condemned
the Knights' leaders for a series of blunders and accused them
of corruption. He visited the imprisoned Haymarket
anarchists in Chicago on his way to the 1887 Knights of Labor
convention in Minneapolis as delegate from Detroit.
After Powderly opposed a clemency resolution for the Haymarket
defendants, Labadie delivered a scathing indictment of
Powderly and his ring.
Disillusioned with the Knights
of Labor, Labadie in 1888 organized with Sam Goldwater the
Michigan Federation of Labor, became its first president, and
forged an alliance with Samuel Gompers.
In 1894,
Labadie, who attributed his ill health to bad air in printing
plants, went to work for the city waterworks. He founded
several discussion clubs, lectured frequently on anarchism,
and helped arrange appearances for anarchist Emma
Goldman.
At the age of 50, he began writing verse and
publishing artistic hand-crafted booklets. In 1908, the
city postal inspector banned his mail because it bore stickers
with anarchist quotations. A month later, the water
board dismissed him for expressing anarchist sentiments.
In both cases, the officials were forced to back down in the
face of massive public support for one of Detroit's most
popular figures.
Beginning in the early 1900s,
Labadie's extensive collection of labor literature was sought
for their institutions by professors in the growing field of
labor scholarship. Labadie chose the University of
Michigan, where it formed the nucleus of the renowned
present-day Labadie Collection.
The Labadies had three
children: Laura, Charlotte, and Laurance. Jo Labadie
died in Detroit on October 7, 1933.
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