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Mary Harris Jones

Read through the most famous quotes from Mary Harris Jones




I abide where there is a fight against wrong.


— Mary Harris Jones


#against #fight #i #where #wrong

I am Mother Jones. The Government can't take my life and you can't take my arm, but you can take my suitcase.


— Mary Harris Jones


#arm #government #i #i am #jones

I am not afraid of the pen, or the scaffold, or the sword.


— Mary Harris Jones


#am #i #i am #pen #scaffold

I am not an anti to anything which will bring freedom to my class.


— Mary Harris Jones


#anti #anything #bring #class #freedom

I have always advised men to read.


— Mary Harris Jones


#always #i #men #read

I nursed men back to sanity who were driven to despair. I solicited clothes for the ragged children, for the desperate mothers. I laid out the dead, the martyrs of the strike.


— Mary Harris Jones


#children #clothes #dead #despair #desperate

I want to hold a series of meetings all over the country and get the facts before the American people.


— Mary Harris Jones


#american people #before #country #facts #get

I was born in revolution.


— Mary Harris Jones


#i #i was born #revolution

I will tell the truth wherever I please.


— Mary Harris Jones


#please #tell #truth #wherever #will

I would fight God Almighty Himself if He didn't play square with me.


— Mary Harris Jones


#fight #god #god almighty #himself #i






About Mary Harris Jones

Mary Harris Jones Quotes




Did you know about Mary Harris Jones?

To enforce worker solidarity Mary Harris Jones travelled to the silk mills in New Jersey and returned to Pennsylvania to report that the conditions Mary Harris Jones observed were far superior. As a union organizer Mary Harris Jones gained prominence for organizing the wives and children of striking workers in demonstrations on their behalf. She was baptized on 1 August 1837 which indicates Mary Harris Jones most likely was born in late July.

Jones worked as a teacher and dressmaker but after her husband and four children all died of yellow fever and her workshop was destroyed in a fire in 1871 Mary Harris Jones began working as an organizer for the Knights of Labor and the United Mine Workers union. From 1897 at around 60 years of age Mary Harris Jones was known as Mother Jones. In 1903 upset about the lax enforcement of the child labor laws in the Pennsylvania mines and silk mills Mary Harris Jones organized a Children's March from Philadelphia to the home of then president Theodore Roosevelt in New York.

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