William Ernst Trautmann (July 1, 1869 – November 18, 1940) was an American trade unionist and author. In 1904 he was one of six co-founders of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and was elected its first General Secretary-Treasurer.

Born to German parents in New Zealand, Trautmann moved to Europe as a young teenager. He worked his way up in the brewery industry in Germany, but was expelled from the country for radical labor activities. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1890 and became a key figure in the United Brewery Workers' Union before being banned for his IWW participation.

Between 1905 and 1912, he held various IWW posts and wrote key pamphlets expressing the union's vision. Following the 1912 Lawrence textile strike, he had a falling out with IWW leadership over the best organizational tactics to pursue. In 1913 he briefly joined the so-called "Yellow IWW" in the Socialist Labor Party. In 1922 he published a novel, Riot, drawing on his experiences as an IWW activist during the 1909 Pressed Steel Car Strike in McKees Rock, Pennsylvania.

Early life

William Trautmann was born in New Zealand into a German-American miner family. When he was four, his father died. At age 14, he moved to Poland where he worked as a brewer's apprentice, and was compelled to work as many hours as his brewmaster demanded. During this time, Trautmann was exposed to radical labor ideas, whose implementation would become his life's work. He opted to relocate to the U.S. since his mother and siblings were already living there.

Trautmann settled in Ohio where he was a labor organizer for the United Brewery Workers' Union.

Time in IWW

In November 1904, Trautmann met with George Estes, W. L. Hall, Isaac Cowen, Clarence Smith, and Thomas J. Hagerty at an informal gathering in Chicago. The six men believed that American labor unions had become powerless and a new movement was necessary. Their meeting was the genesis of the IWW. The organization was formally launched the following June at a convention in Chicago. Trautmann was elected General Secretary-Treasurer.

While in the IWW, he was an organizer, propagandist, and pamphleteer. He became known for his essays articulating the IWW's philosophy. His works included "One Big Union" (1911), "Why Strikes are Lost & How to Win" (1912), and "Industrial Unionism: The Hope of the Workers" (1913). In his unfinished autobiography, he said he considered his IWW publications to be his greatest achievement since they spread the revolutionary industrial unionism movement throughout the world.

Trautmann was involved in many of the factional disputes that plagued the IWW after its founding. In 1906 he and his allies Vincent St. John and Daniel DeLeon were at odds with IWW President Charles Sherman, who represented the more conservative wing of the union. Some members feared Sherman would allow the IWW to pattern itself after the AFL. Trautmann and his allies "advocated direct action, opposed binding contracts, and discussed the use of sabotage and the general strike." His radical faction rallied enough support to outvote Sherman and his backers, and gain control of the IWW.

With his secretary-treasurer duties transferred to St. John, Trautmann focused on field organizing, a job that suited him better. After several failed attempts at strike agitation, he switched tactics to target workplaces with large numbers of European migrant workers, since he was one himself.

Between 1909 and 1912, he endeavored to establish IWW unions among Akron rubber workers and Detroit auto workers. Trautmann sided with the "Yellow" IWW, which emphasized political action. In 1913 he joined Daniel DeLeon's Socialist Labor Party, a Detroit-based IWW splinter group, in the position of "full-time propagandist". Trautmann did not remain long in that post, and in 1914 he left the IWW for good.

Post-IWW years

In 1922, Trautmann wrote a historical novel, Riot, based on his experiences organizing the McKees Rocks strike. That same year he published America's Dilemma, which expressed his shift toward anti-communism and peaceful labor reform:

In his last years, Trautmann lived in Los Angeles where he worked on his autobiography. He was also involved in a New Deal highway project until his death in 1940.

Works

  • Trautmann, William E. (1911). One Big Union: An Outline of a Possible Industrial Organization of the Working Class, with CHART. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co.
  • ———— (1912). Direct Action and Sabotage. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co.
  • ———— (1922). Riot. Chicago: Chicago Labor Printing Co. .
  • ———— (1922). America's Dilemma. Chicago: J. W. Bornhoeft. .

References

Further reading

  • Stuhlfauth, Heiner (2008). Der umherschweifende Bierbrauer: William E. Trautmann - ein deutscher Einwanderer als Impulsgeber der amerikanischen Arbeiterbewegung in Holger Marcks + Matthias Seiffert (Hg.): Die großen Streiks - Episoden aus dem Klasssenkampf. Münster: Unrast-Verlag. Ss. 25-26. .
  • William E. Trautmann Papers at the Walter P. Reuther Library Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan