Amelia Milka Sablich
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Amelia Milka Sablich (born in 1908 in Trinidad, Colorado), also known as Flaming Milka, was 19 years old when she became a leader in the 1927 coal strike in that state.
Sablich became a familiar personality throughout the United States during the months of November and December. The strike in Colorado was conducted by the Industrial Workers of the World; she took an active part in it, speaking out for the cause of the miners. She wore bright red and engaged in physical fights with men (including a mine guard).
Union organizers were locked up and/or deported whenever they could be identified; thus Sablich and other women took over the responsibility for organizing the strike.
Milka spent approximately five weeks in jail spread over at least two occasions. According to the Denver Morning Post, at one point Milka was offered her freedom if she promised not to attend any more meetings of the strikers. She refused to accept such a requirement, and she was kept in jail.
The 1927 coal strike in Colorado is best remembered as the strike in which the "first Columbine Massacre" occurred.
After the massacre and Milka's release, she toured the country giving speeches to raise money for the miners. When the strike was concluded, she enrolled in Work People's College in Duluth, Minnesota.
[edit] References
- "Girl Injured by Mine Guard in Rioting" Article in the Waukesha Freeman 28 October 1927
- "'Flaming' Milka, Girl Strike Leader, Enters Duluth School" Article in the Duluth News-Tribune 22 February 1928
[edit] External links
- "Flaming Milka" from rebelgraphics
- "Slaughter in Serene" from rebelgraphics
- Wobbling, Time magazine, December 5, 1927 (on the Time Magazine Archive, University of Phoenix).
[edit] Further reading
- Slaughter in Serene: the Columbine Coal Strike Reader by Eric Margolis, Joanna Sampson, Phil Goodstein, and Richard Myers (Published by the Industrial Workers of the World)
- Break Their Haughty Power, Joe Murphy in the Heyday of the Wobblies a non-fiction novel by Eugene Nelson, chapters 33-34 (Published (c) 1993 by "ism press, inc")