Louis Lingg

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Louis Lingg, sentenced to death
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Louis Lingg, sentenced to death

Louis Lingg (September 9, 1864November 10, 1887) was a German anarchist who committed suicide while in jail, after being arrested as an agitator during the Haymarket Square bombing.

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[edit] Birth

He was born in Mannheim, Germany to Friedrich Lingg. Lingg's parents made just enough money to meet the needs of both Louis and his younger sister until their father had a tragic accident in the lumber mill where he worked. He had been willing to perform many tasks at the mill that the other workers did not have the nerve to attempt. Friedrich was doing such a task one day as he moved logs down an icy river. The logs started to create a jam and in his effort to get the lumber moving again, he fell through a section of the ice and remained trapped for quite some time. Although his father was saved, Louis believed that the accident caused his father's eventual death because the incident destroyed his father's courageous nature. He was no longer able to undertake the same risky tasks at the lumber mill and he became just like all the other workers: expendable. After 20 years of service his boss fired Friedrich when other workers became more valuable. He died three years later. Louis wrote in his autobiography: "At this time I was thirteen and my sister seven years old, and at this age I received my first impressions of the prevailing unjust social institutions, i.e., the exploitation of men by men."

[edit] Carpenter

Lingg became an apprentice carpenter from 1869 to 1882. He then took a job in Strasbourg, in Alsace, then moved on to Fribourg, Germany where he joined the Working Men's Educational Society, a socialist organization.

[edit] Switzerland

To avoid military service, he moved to Switzerland, but in the spring of 1885, the police in Zurich ordered him to leave the country. He then received a letter from his mother telling him that her new husband was willing to provide him with enough money to move to the United States.

[edit] United States

In July of 1885, Lingg arrived in New York City then departed for Chicago where he joined the International Carpenters and Joiners' Union.

[edit] Haymarket Square

On May 4, 1886, Lingg was not present at Haymarket Square for what would be known as the Haymarket Riot. A bomb was thrown into the crowd of policemen by a unidentified person. Lingg and seven other men were arrested with no evidence in connection with the bombing.

[edit] Trial and suicide

There was no evidence that any of the men arrested had participated in the bombing, but they were all charged with criminal conspiracy, on the theory that their anarchistic writings incited the bomber. Lingg and six others were convicted and sentenced to death. Oscar Neebe was sentenced to fifteen years in prison. Ling commented when he heard of the courts decision, "I die happy on the gallows, so confident am I that the hundreds and thousands to whom I have spoken will remember my words. When you shall have hanged us, then they WILL do the bombthrowing! In this hope do I say to you: I despise you, I despise your order, your laws, your force propped authority. Hang me for it. Lingg took his own life on November 10, 1887, the day before he was scheduled to hang. He used a small bomb that was smuggled in to him. He put it in his mouth and lit it; it blew off his lower jaw and eventually killed him.

[edit] Posthumous pardon

On June 26, 1893 the Illinois governor, John Peter Altgeld, pardoned all eight Haymarket defendants, posthumously in the case of Lingg and the four who had been hanged.

[edit] Selected coverage in the New York Times

  • New York Times; November 7, 1887. Chicago, November 6, 1887. Four bombs were taken this morning from the cell of Louis Lingg, the condemned Anarchist, in Cook County Jail. They were found under his cot, hidden beneath a mass of papers and odd and ends of various kinds, and were inclosed in a harmless-looking ...
  • New York Times; November 10, 1887. Louis Lingg was the most daring and desperate of the Anarchists. From the time of his arrival in Chicago, about seven months before the riot, he devoted his leisure to spreading the doctrines of which Fielden, Spies, and Parsons were the recognized champions.the word is mine

[edit] External links

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