MIA: History: USA: Publications: Lincoln Socialist-Labor (1895-1896)

Lincoln Socialist-Labor

1895 – 1896


Introduction

So-called Lincoln Socialist-Labor, actually published in St. Louis, was a side-project of the powerful St. Louis Socialist Labor Party, represented by its weekly newspaper, Labor. The publication provides additional evidence that there was an alternative Socialist Labor Party "in the provinces," potentially representing a decentralized alternative to the Bolshevik-like New York City monolithic centralism of Daniel DeLeon.

The paper is somewhat distracting for its use of syndicated commercial page layout plates, all of which were prepared independently of editorial control. These contractually included advertisements for baking powder, soap, patent medicine, and such. Don't blame the editors for that, it was part of the deal brokered to receive cheap and more or less decent content to flesh out the size of the paper... (The biographies of early professional baseball players are fascinating. The lame coverage of women's fashion, less so.)

There were four pages under direct editorial control, these being the luxuriously cartooned front page and those typically headed "Our Press," "World of Labor," and "Under our Flag." Lincoln Socialist-Labor was, in reality, a four-page weekly tabloid masquerading as an eight-page weekly, published in a city about 400 miles away and in a different (an distinctly more rural) state than from which it purported to be.

Interpretation of that particular political tactic is above my pay grade. There must have been a theory.

Editor of this paper was Philip Kaufman, of St. Louis. Corresponding address was in that city, and the controlling legal entity behind publication included St. Louis political heavyweight G.A. Hoehn. This run of the publication is exceptional for its completeness as well as the general quality of the master microfilming.

The paper is notable for its consistently fabulous front page cartoon work. Kudos are due to the Nebraska Historical Society for its outstanding work preserving this gem of a holding.

The publication terminated in 1896.

Tim Davenport
Corvallis, OR
April 2019




1895

No. 1, April 27, 1895

No. 2, May 4, 1895

No. 3, May 11, 1895

No. 4, May 18, 1895

No. 5, May 25, 1895

No. 6, June 1, 1895

No. 7, June 8, 1895

No. 8, June 15, 1895

No. 9, June 22, 1895

No. 10, June 29, 1895

No. 11, July 6, 1895

No. 12, July 13, 1895

No. 13, July 20, 1895

No. 14, July 27, 1895

No. 15, August 3, 1895

No. 16, August 10, 1895

No. 17, August 17, 1895

No. 18, August 24, 1895

No. 19, August 31, 1895

No. 20, September 7, 1895

No. 21, September 14, 1895

No. 22, September 21, 1895

No. 23, September 28, 1895

No. 24, October 5, 1895

No. 25, October 12, 1895

No. 26, October 19, 1895

No. 27, October 26, 1895

No. 28, November 2, 1895

No. 29, November 9, 1895

No. 30, November 16, 1895

No. 31, November 23, 1895

No. 32, November 30, 1895

No. 33, December 7, 1895

No. 32 [wrong number], December 14, 1895

No. 33, December 21, 1895

No. 34, December 28, 1895


1896

No. 35, January 4, 1896

No. 36, January 11, 1896

No. 37, January 18, 1896

No. 38, January 25, 1896

No. 39, February 1, 1896

No. 42, February 8, 1896

No. 43, February 15, 1896

No. 44, February 22, 1896

No. 45, February 29, 1896

No. 46, March 7, 1896

No. 47, March 14, 1896

No. 48, March 21, 1896

No. 49, March 28, 1896

No. 50, April 4, 1896

No. 51, April 11, 1896

No. 52, April 18, 1896

No. 53, April 25, 1896

No. 54, May 2, 1896

No. 55, May 9, 1896

No. 56, May 16, 1896

No. 57, May 23, 1896

No. 58, May 30, 1896

No. 59, June 6, 1896

No. 6, June 13, 1896

No. 6, June 20, 1896

No. 6, June 27, 1896

No. 6, July 4, 1896

No. 6, July 11, 1896

No. 6, July 18, 1896

No. 6, July 25, 1896



Last updated on 24 April 2019