Search results
Hill was convicted of the murders in a controversial trial. Following an unsuccessful appeal, political debates, and international calls for clemency from high-profile figures and workers' organizations, Hill was executed in November 1915. After his death, he was memorialized by several folk songs.
Convicted of murder on meager evidence, the singing Wobbly Joe Hill is sentenced on July 8, 1914 to be executed in Utah.
Oct 3, 2024 · In January 1914, while staying with friends in Salt Lake City, Hill was arrested and charged with the murder of a grocer and his son who had been killed during a robbery. The trial that followed was very confusing.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
- Early Life
- Organizing and Writing
- Trial and Execution
- Legacy
- Sources
Born in Sweden in 1879, Joe Hill was the son of a railroad worker who encouraged his family to play music. Young Joe learned to play the violin. When his father died of work-related injuries, Joe had to leave school and begin working in a rope factory. As a teenager, a bout of tuberculosis led him to seek treatment in Stockholm, where he recovered....
Going by the name Joseph Hillstrom, he became involved with the Industrial Workers of the World(IWW). The union, known widely as The Wobblies, was viewed as a radical faction by the public and the mainstream labor movement. Yet it had a devoted following, and Hillstrom, who began calling himself Joe Hill, became an ardent organizer for the union. H...
On January 10, 1914, a former policeman, John Morrison, was attacked in his grocery store in Salt Lake City, Utah. In an apparent robbery, Morrison and his son were shot and killed. Later the same night, Joe Hill, nursing a bullet wound to his chest, presented himself at a local doctor. He claimed he had been shot in a quarrel over a woman and refu...
Hill's body was given a funeral in Utah. His coffin was then taken to Chicago, where a service was conducted by the IWW in a large hall. Hill's coffin was draped in a red flag, and newspaper reports noted bitterly that many of the mourners seemed to be immigrants. Union orators denounced the Utah authorities, and performers sang some of Hill's unio...
"Hill, Joe 1879-1915." American Decades, edited by Judith S. Baughman, et al., vol. 2: 1910-1919, Gale, 2001. Gale Virtual Reference Library.Thompson, Bruce E.R. "Hill, Joe (1879–1914)." The Greenhaven Encyclopedia of Capital Punishment, edited by Mary Jo Poole, Greenhaven Press, 2006, pp. 136-137. Gale Virtual Reference Library."Joe Hill." Encyclopedia of World Biography, vol. 37, Gale, 2017.Hill, Joe. "The Preacher and the Slave." World War I and the Jazz Age, Primary Source Media, 1999. American Journey.Nov 19, 2022 · One hundred seven years ago today, the labor troubadour Joe Hill was executed by a Utah firing squad for a crime he almost certainly didn’t commit. His real crime: singing and agitating on behalf of the working class.
Nov 19, 2011 · In executing a man for his ideology, the State of Utah did indeed create a martyr; in life, Joe Hill had not been particularly heroic – but in death he became an American Folk Hero and worldwide symbol of the exploited.
People also ask
When did Joe Hill die?
How did William Hill die?
What happened to Joe Hill?
How did Joe Hill become famous?
What did Joe Hill do before he was convicted?
Who is Joe Hill?
In 1887, Hill's father died from an occupational injury and the children were forced to quit school to support themselves. The 9-year-old Hill worked in a rope factory and later as a fireman on a steam-powered crane.