7/20/2008 3:34 AM Email this article Print this article  

SOCIALIST'S STORY UNFOLDS
This article has been read 1109 times.

By Scott Beveridge

Staff writer

sbeveridge@observer-reporter.com

CHARLEROI - Darlene Pennline's mother gathered all documents linking their family to the Socialist Party and tossed them into the flames of a coal furnace in the 1950s.


The files were destroyed because U.S. Sen. Joe McCarthy had launched the Red Scare, an intense mission to expose and prosecute communists and their likes in a wide-reaching witch-hunt.

"My grandfather wanted all of that stuff concerning his father out," said Pennline, 72, of Charleroi.

And so the family's impressive story of their ancestor, Louis Goaziou, was swept under the rug, discussed only in whispers, until the last surviving Goaziou died in April.

The death of Herbert Goaziou reopened the doors to his grandfather's intact Charleroi print shop that barely changed since the early 1900s, when Louis Goaziou began publishing a newspaper that promoted the Socialist mission.

It's an astounding collection of a bygone era with a story of international interest because of its connection to the French Socialist movement, said Ronald A. Baraff, director of museum collections and archives at the Steel Industry Heritage Corp., who came to Charleroi last week after hearing about the print shop.

"To walk in and it be unchanged and to have that story all in one place is phenomenal," Baraff said Wednesday at the 807 Fallowfield Ave. building.

Louis Goaziou was born March 22, 1864, in Scrignac County in the French province of Brittany, where his family raised him to be a priest.

But he shunned the rigidity of the Roman Catholic hierarchy, Pennline said, and became involved in France's radical workers' movement after experiencing hardships while employed in a coal mine.

Goaziou immigrated to America in 1880 and settled in Charleroi, where he began about 20 years later publishing a French-language newspaper, L'Union Des Travailleurs, which, when translated, means the union of workers.

He used the newspaper to spread Socialist propaganda, especially the importance of workers pooling their resources to benefit their families and neighbors. He has been called by the French a militant and "the most remarkable figure" of the Franco-American Socialist movement.

The Charleroi area was a hotbed for union activism under the leadership of Goaziou, who also founded the Co-Masons that gave women equal rights to join the organization. As many as 40 percent of the steelworkers in nearby Donora could have been considered socialists for rejecting World War I.

Goaziou hosted a visit in Charleroi in 1911 by Eugene Debs, who ran for president on the Socialist ticket. He also helped to organize volatile labor rallies, one of which was attended by Mother Jones, a fierce labor and community organizer who was popular in the coalfields.

In 1908, Goaziou became the first president of the American Federation of Human Rights, which wanted its members to shun ignorance, keep high standards of honor and support social justice for men and women.

He had noble ambitions in an era before communism and socialism became associated with oppression after the 1917 Russian Revolution.

After his March 31, 1937, death at age 73, the printing business was owned by his son, Herbert, and passed along to his grandson, Herbert, who stopped printing on his 90th birthday on May 25, 2003.

Pennline is Louis Goaziou's great-granddaughter, and a niece of the Herbert Goaziou who recently died and never had any children.

She has vowed to dedicate her retirement to turning the print shop into a museum in partnership with the Charleroi Area Historical Society.

The museum is the first step in developing a walking and driving tour of Charleroi, whose downtown with Belgium-influenced architecture was included in September on the National Registry of Historic Districts.

The Goaziou story also prompted the National Park Service to dispatch a photographer to Charleroi last week to document the building. The photos will be added to the public digital files of the National Library of Congress.

Despite the loss of the family's Socialist files, the Goazious kept just about every other record down to the shop's first contract April 27, 1910, for power from West Penn Electric Co.

They weren't much for show, having just painted the walls in the shop once in a dull battleship gray. Several dusty and faded nude photos of pinups were attached to the wall behind the three printing presses, including one of actress and 1930s sex symbol Jean Harlow.

The presses are known in the industry as platen jobbers that date to the 1840s and are considered to be America's contribution to the printing industry.

Pennline has been asked to refrain from moving anything in the pressroom until a preservation expert is consulted to date the presses and devise a preservation plan, said Nikki Sheppick, the historical society's secretary.

She said the shop was deemed the most important among the 1,800 buildings in town that earned the National Registry honor. "This is the premier site in the puzzle," Sheppick said.


Home

3 comments

Socialism/Communism : 7/20/2008
Joe McCarthy was not wrong. This movement, these people and this party which was outlawed and illegal has caused what you see today. Mass decay of and in our Society.Our becoming a secular nation as they have in France. Ridiculous to praise those that have destroyed this society from within and continue today.

Montana Man

ignorance is the cornerstone of fascism : 7/21/2008
History has proven Joe McCarthy an inflammatory Red-baiter who ruined the lives of many of his fellow citizens who disagreed with his fascist groupthink definition of "patriotism." Those destroying America from within are those who promulgate ignorance and fear. Out of that fear, we have become akin to the totalitarian Soviet Union. It will take many generations to get our country back, but it starts this November.

trippin

Don't be a Bunch of Rummies : 7/23/2008
This was NOT a "socialist" project - but an HISTORICAL one - and it is the hope of the historical society and the community to utilize this as well as other projects to "capitalize" on to help their town regenerate its economy via Mon River heritage tourism. Get a grip - its not mean't to be "political", which in my opinion destroys everything it touches.

nacs/cahs
Subject:
Body:
Poster:
captcha 2690c58baba846ae8edab44d22089464
Enter text seen above:

O-R Online


























 


Copyright 2008, Observer Publishing Co. Washington, PA
1998-2008 All Rights Reserved