Dyer Lum was a revolutionary, anarchists, labor activists, and journalist closely associated with both the activities and people of the Haymarket Affair. After the execution of Albert Parons, Lum relaunched The Alarm. paper of the International Working People’s Association
Concise History of the Great Trial of the Chicago Anarchists in 1886 by Dyer D. Lum. Socialistic Publishing Company, Chicago. C. 1887.
Contents: Preface, Map, The Eight-Hour Movement, The Great Strike, The Haymarket Speeches, Empaneling the Jury, The Jury in the Case, Evidence for the Prosecution, Evidence for the Prosecution (cont), Arguments for the Defense, Testimony for the Defense, Review of Evidence, The Alleged Conspiracy, Conclusion, Appendixes, Captain Black’s Address, A Fund for the Jury, A.R. Parson on the Eight-Hour Movement, Why this Book Was Written. 194 pages.
The Alarm was an extremely important paper at a momentous moment in the history of the US and international workers’ movement. The Alarm was the paper of the International Working People’s Association produced weekly in Chicago and edited by Albert Parsons. The IWPA was formed by anarchists and social revolutionists who left the Socialist Labor Party in 1883 led by Johann Most who had recently arrived in the States. The SLP was then dominated by German-speaking Lassalleans focused on electoral work, and a smaller group of Marxists largely focused on craft unions. In the immigrant slums of proletarian Chicago, neither were as appealing as the city’s Lehr-und-Wehr Vereine (Education and Defense Societies) which armed and trained themselves for the class war. With 5000 members by the mid-1880s, the IWPA quickly far outgrew the SLP, and signified the larger dominance of anarchism on radical thought in that decade.
The Alarm first appeared on October 4, 1884, one of eight IWPA papers that formed, but the only one in English. Parsons was formerly the assistant-editor of the SLP’s ‘People’ newspaper and a pioneer member of the American Typographical Union. By early 1886 Alarm claimed a run of 3000, while the other Chicago IWPA papers, the daily German Arbeiter-Zeitung (Workers’ Newspaper) edited by August Spies and weeklies Der Vorbote (The Harbinger) had between 7-8000 each, while the weekly Der Fackel (The Torch) ran 12000 copies an issue. A Czech-language weekly Budoucnost (The Future) was also produced. Parsons, assisted by Lizzie Holmes and his wife Lucy Parsons, issued a militant working-class paper. The Alarm was incendiary in its language, literally. Along with openly advocating the use of force, The Alarm published bomb-making instructions. Suppressed immediately after May 4, 1886, the last issue edited by Parson was April 24. On November 5, 1887, one week before Parson’s execution, The Alarm was relaunched by Dyer Lum but only lasted half a year. Restarted again in 1888, The Alarm finally ended in February 1889. The Alarm is a crucial resource to understanding the rise of anarchism in the US and the world of Haymarket and one of the most radical eras in US working class history.
PDF of book: https://archive.org/download/ldpd_14875839_000/ldpd_14875839_000.pdf