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    Economy

    USW Union Rhetoric Looks Back to 1959 For Help

    Written by Sandy Williams


    The USW union is reaching back into the annuals of steel strife to remind their members of the fight that was waged in order to receive some of the things that USS and ArcelorMittal want to change. Empty rhetoric or a sign of problems to come? A recent USW update referenced the song Gary, Indiana 1959 by Dave Alvin.   We have reprinted the lyrics below of this classic labor song.

    Gary, Indiana 1959
          Lyrics by Dave Alvin

    I’m old, weak and grey and I’m running out of time
    Yeah, but you should have seen me, brother, when I was young and in my prime
    Back in Gary, Indiana in 1959

    I was a steel working man with two kids and loving wife
    And the Union was strong, smokestacks burning day and night
    Back in Gary, Indiana in 1959

    But then the accountants and lawyers and bosses at U.S. Steel

    Sent down the word that we had to take their rotten deal
    But from Birmingham to Pueblo, Oakland to Allentown
    The workers got together and we shut the Big Boys down
    The President and Supreme Court tried to force us off the line
    Back in Gary, Indiana in 1959

    Now the years have disappeared in the blink of an eye
    And I feel like a stranger in world that isn’t mine
    My dear wife died, my kids all moved away
    Cause there’s nothing round here to make them want to stay
    Cause the factories are in ruins, decent jobs are hard to find
    And you can’t get ahead no matter how hard you try
    Cause the Big Boys make the rules, tough luck for everyone else
    And out on the streets, brother, it’s every man for himself
    But I still remember when we marched side by side
    Back in Gary, Indiana in 1959

    Don’t bury my body, brother, when it’s my time to die
    Just throw me in that smelter and let my ashes fly
    Back home to Gary, Indiana in 1959

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