The Anti-Union South: Operation Dixie
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Anti-CIO political poster from Eastman, GA, circa 1946.
Courtesy of the Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, Stetson Kennedy Papers.
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Text on reverse: "'Want Ad' placed by the KKK in The Orlando Sentinel-Star intended to deter Black orange pickers from joining the CIO or taking more lucrative jobs in the defense industry, 1942." Stetson Kennedy (1916-2011), writer and civil rights activist, collected these photographs during the course of his career, fighting for equality throughout the southern United States.
Courtesy of the Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, Stetson Kennedy Papers.
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Billboard erected by the management of a north Georgia textile mill to counter the CIO's "Operation Dixie" program.
Courtesy of the Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, Stetson Kennedy Papers.
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Anti-union propaganda mailed by Christian American Association, based in Texas, which lobbied for open shop amendments to state constitutions (Stetson Kennedy collection).
Courtesy of the Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, Stetson Kennedy Papers.
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Excerpt from memoir manuscript Operation Dixie: Union Organizing for the CIO in the American South by George Johnston, who organized in Georgia for the CIO in the late 1940s.
Courtesy of the Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, Stetson Kennedy Papers.
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KKK answer to the CIO's "Operation Dixie," circa 1940s/50s.
Courtesy of the Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, Stetson Kennedy Papers.
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Leaflet from Georgia organizing campaign in response to Bibb Mill's anti-union propaganda.
Courtesy of Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, M. H. Ross Papers.
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Two articles from the Macon Voice, November 1945, the first exhorting Macon's African American ministers and citizens to encourage unionization and support the NAACP.
Courtesy of Southern Labor Archives, Georgia State University, M. H. Ross Papers.
In 1946 the CIO pushed to overhaul labor in the South by attempting to “organize the disorganized” in a massive campaign drive called Operation Dixie. If it succeeded, not only would southern workers benefit, but it would also strengthen the power of unions across the country. However, northern CIO leadership underestimated southern segregation. To counter organizers, Ku Klux Klan propaganda warned of a “Jewish-Communist” takeover and Black managers overseeing white workers. In a typical attempt to sign up these workers, a college graduate named George Johnston was sent with other CIO unionists down to Georgia to organize cotton mills. In Columbus the Bibb Manufacturing Company operated a “company town,” where it owned its employees’ homes and ran its own police force. Johnston recalled only being able to speak to a single Bibb worker outside the mill, who was soon after threatened by a company guard with dismissal and eviction. When Johnston and his coworkers leafleted the mills, they were chased away. Operation Dixie ultimately failed to enlist large numbers of working men, in part because it couldn’t overcome whites’ deep-seated prejudices, which were easily manipulated by employers who wanted to keep their workers fighting each other instead of their working conditions.