Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The Women of the Copper Country: A Novel
The Women of the Copper Country: A Novel
The Women of the Copper Country: A Novel
Ebook432 pages8 hours

The Women of the Copper Country: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

From the bestselling and award-winning author of The Sparrow comes “historical fiction that feels uncomfortably relevant today” (Kirkus Reviews) about “America’s Joan of Arc”—the courageous woman who started a rebellion by leading a strike against the largest copper mining company in the world.

In July 1913, twenty-five-year-old Annie Clements has seen enough of the world to know that it’s unfair. She’s spent her whole life in the mining town of Calumet, Michigan, where men risk their lives for meager salaries—and have barely enough to put food on the table for their families. The women labor in the houses of the elite, and send their husbands and sons deep underground each day, dreading the fateful call of the company man telling them their loved ones aren’t coming home. So, when Annie decides to stand up for the entire town of Calumet, nearly everyone believes she may have taken on more than she is prepared to handle.

Yet as Annie struggles to improve the future of her town, her husband becomes increasingly frustrated with her growing independence. She faces the threat of prison while also discovering a forbidden love. On her fierce quest for justice, Annie will see just how much she is willing to sacrifice for the families of Calumet.

From one of the most versatile writers in contemporary fiction, this novel is an authentic and moving historical portrait of the lives of the crucial men and women of the early labor movement “with an important message that will resonate with contemporary readers” (Booklist).
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAtria Books
Release dateAug 6, 2019
ISBN9781982109608
Author

Mary Doria Russell

Mary Doria Russell is the author of five previous books, The Sparrow, Children of God, A Thread of Grace, Dreamers of the Day, and Doc, all critically acclaimed commercial successes. Dr. Russell holds a PhD in biological anthropology. She lives in Lyndhurst, Ohio.

Read more from Mary Doria Russell

Related to The Women of the Copper Country

Related ebooks

Biographical/AutoFiction For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for The Women of the Copper Country

Rating: 4.207100591715976 out of 5 stars
4/5

169 ratings35 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This story tore at my heart.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Another great book by one of my very favorite authors, Mary Doria Russell!If you're looking for a good book to read these days, I highly recommend The Women of the Copper Country.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This fictional account of the 1913 strike against the Michigan copper mining giant C&H Mining, is told primarily from the point of view of "Big Annie" Klobuchar Clements, a woman of great physical presence and a mighty will to improve the lives of the families of Calumet, Michigan. Annie became the icon of the labor movement for a time, through photographs and articles featuring her carrying a huge American flag at the front of parade after parade of striking miners and their families, despite the fact that her own husband was one of a fairly large contingent of miners who did not approve of the work stoppage. This is a grand tale, featuring Mother Jones and other strong women of the era, as well as the nastiest coldest villain since Ebenezer Scrooge, the (as far as I can tell) entirely fictional James MacNaughton, owner of everything. The detail of life in the paternalistic society of industrial America at its most unbridled is vivid and unnerving. In the book, as in history, the ending is sad beyond belief, but Russell added a couple twists of poetic justice to soften it a bit. As totally engrossing as every other novel of hers that I have read. Russell gives us an author's note at the end, explaining where she has taken the most liberty with the historical record.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In the pre- World War I era, Michigan’s Calumet Copper Mines were a literal hell hole. An average of one man a week died; others each week were horribly maimed. Of course, there was no recompense from the mining companies for the killed or injured. Day to day conditions were also frightful – long days, low pay, very young boys putting in twelve hour shifts.The times were changing, and unions and strikes had been successful at other mines. But the unions tried to carefully plan their strikes in a way that would help ensure their success.One day, however, in Calumet, there was one death too many. The women of Calumet, led by "Big Annie" Klobuchar Clements formed the auxiliary of the Western Federation of Miners and compelled their men to immediately strike.The stories of strikes and strikebreaking in the US are ugly – and this one is the same.However, this one focuses on the women behind the striking men. Famous women leaders such as Mother Jones and Ella Reeve Bloor briefly step in to help. But the true force behind the men were Annie and the everyday wives and mothers, as they marched, kept the men strong, raised gardens and children and opened clothing swaps. Big Annie was a true force of nature – and we see her determination and love. There is a horrendous incident near the end of the book. I must have subconsciously remembered this incident or read a review – because I read this book with trepidation, fearful that something terrible would happen. And it did.It takes some strength to read this one. But I learned quite a bit in this historical novel – not the least of which is that what seems like utter doom and failure can be the seeds of the progress you are seeking.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Mary Doria Russell's fictional story of Michigan's Copper Country strike that took place over nine months in 1913 - 1914. It was led by Annie Clements, the wife of a minor, who became known as the Joan of Arc of America. The Women of the Copper Country is mainly her story but as the title suggests, it is the story of all the women. They led unbelievably difficult lives, often beaten by their alcoholic husbands and thrown out of their company homes with their children when those husbands died in the mines. But, they managed to make something out of nothing, sharing whatever they had and often going hungry themselves. Russell's prose is rich with details, pulling us into miners' shacks and millionaires' mansions as she recreates this pivotal time in labor history. It is difficult sometimes for us to realize just how courageous these early protesters were to suggest that they had rights. Russell depicts the coldness of the bosses and upper class towards the workers, their belief in their superiority by reason of birth, and the casual violence they dispense to protect their profits. Russell stays close to the historical events while providing information about larger history and personalities related to labor strikes. Mother Jones makes an appearance along with Ella Reeve Bloor. And, Clements' maiden name was Klobuchar!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Don’t let the topic of this book turn you away from it. It’s not a dry tale of labor negotiations and coal miners. Russell is the kind of story teller that really brings a world to life whether that world is the palatial mansion of the president of the mine company or the cold, dark depths of a copper mine.The book is based on the life of a real person Annie Clements. a labor activist and president of the local Women’s Auxiliary No. 15 of the Western Federation of Miners. She was quite a firebrand for her day and I’m now quite interested in learning more about her. I love when a book introduces me to someone in history and makes me want to learn more.The men of Calumet go down into the mines for long dark hours for little pay. Their wages go to company housing and to paying for commodities at the company store. They barely have time to see their families. The union comes offering the possibility of better working conditions and hours. They strike with the women offering their support.Annie and her strong personality drive this story and she is a fascinating woman. She was truly ahead of her time. The book is focused on her but does explore the issues of the mine’s control of almost every aspect of its workers lives. Plus the coming automation that would soon take jobs away. It was a time of growing union growth and strength with horrifying push back from industry – often in ways that were illegal but overlooked as the mine owners controlled the local and in some cases the state governments.I was fascinated with this story. Ms. Russell’s writing kept me turning the pages even though I knew a bit of union history and was aware of what might be the outcome. I’m trying to be circumspect so as to not give away the story for anyone who doesn’t know what might have happened. It is indeed a somewhat obscure topic for a book but this is definitely a book that will keep your interest and one worth reading.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Big Annie Clements, a tall woman with a formidable spirit, takes a leadership in the Women's Auxiliary in support of the miners' union and strike in 1913. Beginning in June and following events in the copper mining town of Calumet, this historical fiction illuminates an all-but-forgotten time and place.Mary Doria Russell's books have a habit of ripping out your heart and mind, and putting you back together again, hopefully wiser and more empathetic for the experience of it. This book is no exception, though to entirely explain why is to give away everything. I love her books; I can read only one a year. A phenomenal book that has everything I look for in a good historical fiction - wonderful characters, great sense of place, and an author's note that parses truth and fiction and gives me suggestions for what to read next.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In the early 1900s, the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company was one of the most profitable copper mines in the United States. But they got there on the backs of their workforce, comprised almost entirely of immigrants, who were seen as expendable by the “real American” mine owner, James MacNaughton. While C&H prided itself on building a company town that provided housing and amenities for its workers, MacNaughton’s top priority was worker productivity. He had little care for the dangerous nature of the work and the inevitable injuries and fatalities. Enter Annie Clements, the wife of a miner and a natural leader. When a miner is killed while working with the new “one man drill,” Annie mobilizes the women into a force for change. They begin holding daily marches, asking “what price copper?” by calling attention to the many lives lost in pursuit of profits. Their activism built support for unionization, which ultimately led to a strike. The way the strike unfolded, its impact on management and miners alike, and the way in which the strike came to an end, make for fascinating reading, all the more so since the story is told almost entirely from a female perspective. Mary Doria Russell is known for writing meticulously researched historical fiction, and this is yet another example. Since women’s stories are less well documented, she often had to infer or extrapolate, but the Author’s Note helpfully acknowledges where this was required. Russell’s characters are well developed, and the story is well-paced, especially in its portrayal of the dramatic events which ultimately ended the strike. I can’t say enough about this book: just go read it, already!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book tells the true story of a mining strike that took place in Michigan in 1913. The strike was largely led by Annie Klobuchar Clements, a formidable young woman who rallied miners to strike for a long 9 months.As always, Russell writes vivid, believable, and lovable characters, and the reader can't help but care about them. Spoilers about the end of the book and how it relates to current events: [spoiler]The problem with writing historical fiction is that history doesn't always have a tidy and satisfying ending. Russell can usually pull a good ending out of history anyway, but in this case, the book kind of fizzles out at the end. I suspect that this reflects Russell's struggles with current events. Throughout a lot of the novel, I thought writing the book must have been cathartic for Russell: here was a young woman taking power, holding rich men accountable, and proving that underdogs can fight against corruption. You can almost picture Annie wearing a pussy hat. But then at the end, the strike fizzles out, the miners go back to work, and Annie's fate is uncertain. The most morally devastating part of the book is that the owner of the mine doesn't change at all: even Russell's minor characters are usually dynamic and experience some sort of character development, but the mine owner does not, and I suspect that reflects Russell's own frustration and despair in the Trump era.[/spoiler]
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    An excellent book by one of today’s best novelists. Russell paints an indelible picture of life in the copper mines of upper Michigan and of a strike by copper miners pre-1920. The story is powerful and moving - evenly paced and historically significant- this is Mary Doria Russell at her best. If you have not read every one of her novels on very diverse subjects, you are missing out on a “master”.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    While I had enjoyed tremendously three previous historical novels by Mary Doria Russell - EPITAPH, DOC and DREAMERS OF THE DAY - her latest, THE WOMEN OF THE COPPER COUNTRY, was something of a chore - a slog even - to get through. And I had been very much looking forward to this one, since I am a native Michigander, and WOMEN is set in Calumet, a mining town of the Upper Peninsula. The year was 1913, and the book's heroine is "Big Annie" Klobuchar Clemens, head of the Women's Auxiliary of the local union, who was a driving force behind a miners' strike for better wages and working conditions. (I kept wondering if there was a family connection to Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar, whose forebears toiled in the iron mines.)I know that Russell is known for her prodigious research into her subjects, which was woven seamlessly into the three aforementioned earlier books, and it's painfully obvious she's done her homework here too, with all the references to Governor Woodbridge Ferris, President Wilson, Mother Jones, Joe Hill, Ellen Bloor, Samuel Gompers and Clarence Darrow, the horrendous winter storms in the Great Lakes that year, as well as other historical events, such as the Suffragettes in London and US Marines fighting in Mexico, notable boxing matches, etc. The problem for me was all this historical "background" material tended to nearly bury whatever plotline and character development was there, and unfortunately there was not a whole lot of either. The villainous mine manager, James NacNaughton, remained rather one-dimensional, an evil "Oilcan Harry" type. And Big Annie, as a towering, flag-draped American Joan of Arc, while interesting at first, became less so as her story progressed, and seemed even less important after the climactic and tragic Italian Hall disaster, after which she seemed to just fade out and disappear. Russell's attempts at making historical figures her own characters were not exactly seamless. Mother Jones and Ellen Bloor were okay, but Ferris not so much, which was disappointing, since I am an alum of Ferris State, and my wife was one a resident of Helen Ferris Hall dorm there.Ah well. It took nearly two hundred pages to set the scene and introduce a perhaps too-large cast of characters, both real and fictional. The final hundred and fifty pages was a lot more interesting, but the post-disaster denouement, explanations and summing up dragged a bit. I was relieved to get to the end. There is a pretty good story in here, but it is nearly buried in often extraneous details. Not Russell's best. Cautiously recommended, especially for Michigan history buffs. (three and a half stars)- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Don’t let the topic of this book turn you away from it. It’s not a dry tale of labor negotiations and coal miners. Russell is the kind of story teller that really brings a world to life whether that world is the palatial mansion of the president of the mine company or the cold, dark depths of a copper mine.The book is based on the life of a real person Annie Clements. a labor activist and president of the local Women’s Auxiliary No. 15 of the Western Federation of Miners. She was quite a firebrand for her day and I’m now quite interested in learning more about her. I love when a book introduces me to someone in history and makes me want to learn more.The men of Calumet go down into the mines for long dark hours for little pay. Their wages go to company housing and to paying for commodities at the company store. They barely have time to see their families. The union comes offering the possibility of better working conditions and hours. They strike with the women offering their support.Annie and her strong personality drive this story and she is a fascinating woman. She was truly ahead of her time. The book is focused on her but does explore the issues of the mine’s control of almost every aspect of its workers lives. Plus the coming automation that would soon take jobs away. It was a time of growing union growth and strength with horrifying push back from industry – often in ways that were illegal but overlooked as the mine owners controlled the local and in some cases the state governments.I was fascinated with this story. Ms. Russell’s writing kept me turning the pages even though I knew a bit of union history and was aware of what might be the outcome. I’m trying to be circumspect so as to not give away the story for anyone who doesn’t know what might have happened. It is indeed a somewhat obscure topic for a book but this is definitely a book that will keep your interest and one worth reading.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Mary Doria Russell has, once again, managed to mine (oops, pun) history and produce a spectacular story based on real historical incidents, this time in the northern Michigan peninsular where copper mining is the main way of life in the early 1900s. Anna Klobuchar Clemenc, a real historical figure, is a giant of a woman in more ways than one. Ridiculed as a child because of her size, she married the first man taller than her who came along. In Calamut, Michigan, if you’re a man, you work in the dark, dank, dangerous copper mines. Annie takes in the number of deaths and terrible injuries from working in the mine and, as President of the Women’s Auxiliary of the Western Federation of Miners, plays a large part in leading the miners to the strike in 1913. The story is riveting and Russell gives us so much information on the condition in the mines at this time and forces us to face the incredible danger to the immigrants who did the bulk of the work. By juxtaposing that with the haughty, arrogant mine supervisor, my blood was ready to boil. But it also made me so proud of the hard working women who helped in so many ways, even in the midst of tragedy. And boy can Russell describe tragedy. Ghastly tragedy. Very highly recommended.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "And we aren't going to wait around for the Second Coming, are we! We won't wait for Jesus to come back and make things right. We aren't going to beg for a decent life, a good life, a healthy life. We are going to demand those things--for ourselves! For our neighbors! For our children! And for all the working stiffs who come after us.""And that, children, is how you by-God raise some hell." The setting is 1913, in a copper-mining town in the upper-peninsula of Michigan. Annie Clements spent her whole life in this town and saw the mining industry destroy her loved ones and weaken the community, forcing them to completely depend on the mining company, to survive. The conditions were abysmal, to say the least.With the help of a union organizer, Annie takes on the arrogant mine owners, calling for a strike, knowing it will, most likely destroy her marriage and threaten her life. I normally don't fall for the female main characters, in the novels I read but I had to say I found, twenty-five old Annie Clements quite appealing and not only for her looks and stature but also for her sharp mind, her fearlessness, and unflagging dedication. Team that up this author's deft research skills and her robust writing chops and you have a terrific, hard-hitting story, that also happens to be based on actual characters and events. Yep, MDR has delivered again.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Having visited Copper Country some years ago, steeped in its history of mining, excessive wealth, dirt poverty, and tragedy, my interest in this title was highly piqued. And oh, what a story this one was! Author Mary Doria Russell delivers a rich telling of the people, place and time of 1913 Calumet, Michigan - the heart of Michigan's Keewenaw Peninsula and the richest Michigan city, in its day. Copper mining made it so rich, that back in 1890, the state capital almost moved there.It's 1913. The winds of war are beginning to brew in Europe. Germany is flexing its muscles and the world's industrialists are smelling great revenue opportunities - none more so than the copper producers. Copper is a vital component in the brass casings of bullets and artillery shells and it clads the hulls of warships. The Calumet and Hecla Mining Company has positioned itself well to fill those military orders. It considers itself to be a forward thinking and enlightened company. Heck, it even provides clubhouses, bowling alleys, and a library with materials in 20 languages to the miners and their families. It even matches the miners' contributions to the employee aid fund. (Of course, very view miners can even make that first payment given how little they make in the mine of the company town in which they live.)The copper veins of the Keewenaw run deep beneath the ground. Every day, miners descend deep under the earth's surface and are grateful each day in which they can walk out of it. Meanwhile, the surface mines of the West are applying pressure on C&H's profitability and a one-man drill is born. Sure, it weighs 150 lbs and can only be wielded by the strongest miner but it allows management to cut the employee roster way back. The Miners' Union is against this new method as it forces miners to work alone thus increasing safety risk. It also takes away a lot of jobs of the dues paying members. In walks Big Annie, Anna Klobuchar Clements, a larger than life woman (after all, she's of Finnish stock and over six feet tall). She is married to a miner. She's fiercely compassionate for the miners, their wives, widows and children. Following yet another death from the mines, she and her Women's Auxiliary of the Western Federation of Miners, Local 15, have had enough. It's time that H&C treat their employees fairly and improve work conditions - accept an 8-hour instead of 12-hour workday from each miner; 5 instead of 6-day work week, provide minimum wages, and improve the safety of each mine. Thus the famous strike of all mines in the Michigan Copper Country was called by the Western Federation of Miners in July, 2013 and Big Annie was out in front to lead it. At this point, this rich story takes off and the reader is in for quite a ride.Ms. Russell has deftly produced a well written and an extremely well researched narrative of the mining life of the early 20th century. Many of the characters of the story are real people of history - Big Annie, Mary Harris Jones (known as "Mother Jones"), Ella Boor, Governor Woodbridge Ferris, and James MacNaughton - the heartless General Manager of H&C. Within her author's notes, she clearly shares where in the story she has created some characters to facilitate the flow of the story. She also provides references for the reader's further historical research. All in all, this was an excellent piece of historical fiction and definitely worth reading. I look forward to Ms. Russell's other books, already of much renown.I am grateful to Ms. Russell and Atria Books of Simon and Schuster for having provided a free advance, uncorrected reader's proof of this book through NetGalley. Their generosity, however, did not influence this review - the words of which are mine alone.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This novel takes place in Calumet Michigan in 1913. At this time, Calumet had the largest and most profitable copper mines in the US. Workers risked their lives every day underground with frequent deaths and injuries. The workers rent their homes from the company and shop in the company store and even have to buy their own gloves and shovels to work with. As the working population of the mines live a meager existence, the stock holders and mine managers are living the high life - trips to Europe, large homes and sumptuous food. They feel like they are doing the workers - many of them immigrants - a favor by providing them a place to work. It's no wonder that the promise of the unions have gained popularity with the workers.This is an emotional novel about the workers who struggled with mistreatment by the rich owners and the people's involvement in the early labor movement in US work places. The strikes caused violence and upset in the strikers lives as they had to decide whether to continue their strike or give in to the owner's demands. Annie Clements was a real person who led the strike at the copper mines in the years before WWI. She was a real inspiration who only wanted the betterment of the working conditions to help families. "What the union wants is simple. Eight hours for work. Eight hours for sleep. Eight hours for families to be together."
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What do the women of the copper country do while the men are down in the pits mining? It takes no great imagination to picture them cooking, cleaning, mending, caring for children, and, if in much less dangerous conditions, generally working just as hard as their men.According to Russell, though, they also organized. At least in Calumet, Michigan they did. When male union organizers got very little traction with the workers of the Calumet-Hecla mining company, where death or serious injury happened weekly, the latest death, with the resultant orphaned children, is the straw that breaks the back of Annie Clements's patience. She organizes the women, and the union and most of the workers follow, if somewhat reluctantly. Annie is a striking figure, though (no pun intended), and the walk-out soon becomes national news, thanks to the efforts of an aspirational photojournalist.All of Russell's characters leap off the page, as anyone who's familiar with her work already knows. Everyone from Annie to her anti-union husband, to James McNaughton, the manager of the mine, is shown to have at least one or two layers. Incidentally, Russell pulls no punches in her descriptions of McNaughton's callousness toward his workers, a characterization Russell assures us is firmly based in historical reality.Russell is known for the quality of the research she puts into her books, and this one is no exception. But she also has the gift of communicating the knowledge she has accumulated without being didactic. Having turned her attention to the beginning of the labor movement, she treats her readers to a heart-breaking look at what it cost the people who fought for the rights of all workers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The determination and power of women who literally had none in the 1900's is one of the themes in THE WOMEN OF THE COPPER COUNTRY.Annie Clements had always been someone who helped others. Being a miner's wife she knew how they and their families could always use help in one way or another.Because of the need, Annie banded together with the wives of the copper miners to stop the unsafe conditions in the copper mines and the deaths of loved ones by trying to get the miners to join the union. The other and main theme was the strike called by the miners so the company would recognize the union and get better working conditions.Annie and the other wives want the men to join the union so they can ask for shorter days and more pay for their dangerous, unhealthful work that only makes the owners of the mines rich.We follow Annie and the families as they prepare to strike to get what they need for their families.We get to see the personal side of this community, share in their sorrows and worries, see how they suffer at the hands of company owners who won't give into union demands, and see how they come together to help one another in times of need.Most of the characters were easy to like and to relate to. Some were despicable.If you are a fan of historical fiction, women's fiction, and learning about the lifestyle and hardships in the early 1900's both personal and work-wise, THE WOMEN OF THE COPPER COUNTRY will be a book you will want to read.This book brought to light for me another not very well-known historical event about the plight of the copper miners and their families in Calumet, Michigan. All isn't pleasant especially when the strikebreakers come on the scene.A good book always has me looking up more information about events taking place in the story line, and THE WOMEN OF THE COPPER COUNTRY is no exception. Dr. Russell's thorough, in-depth research brought the reader into the town and homes of the Calumet families. 4/5This book was given to me as an ARC by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    3.5Few people outside of Michigan know anything about our Upper Penninsula (UP). As a matter of fact, a recent Mt. Dew ad featuring a map of America drew Michigander's ire when the UP was colored to be part of Wisconsin!The UP has its own peninsula jutting into the deep inland ocean of Lake Superior, the Kewanee Penninsula. And a short distance from the top of that arm is Calumet, Michigan. Today it is a village of about 800 people. But in the late 19th c when the UP was a center of copper mining there were 40,000 souls there.The copper was mined for 120 years. It was break-backing, dangerous work. Waves of immigrants found their way to Michigan's lumber and mining industries. The UP was particularly attractive to immigrants from Finland but drew from across Europe. These unskilled laborers were put to use with a sledgehammer and shovel, and cheaper than mules, used to push the loaded cars.Mary Doria Russell's new novel The Women of the Cooper Country recreates Calumet in 1913 in rich detail, drawing on actual people and events.Called the Paris of the North, Calumet had grown into a modern town, built by the wealth from the Calumet & Hecla copper mine. But profit-driven capitalism meant management rejected worker's demands for a shorter workday, a living wage, and safe work conditions. A new drill allowed a miner to work alone instead of in pairs. It was a cost savings but put the men at higher risk.The workers debated unionizing. An unusual labor leader arose, Annie Klobuar Clements, a miner's wife born in Calumet to Slovakian immigrants. She had seen too many families with maimed men and boys, too many funerals.What is the price of copper? It was men's limbs and lives. It was men too tired to live, self-medicating with drink. It was widows and orphaned children. If the men would not organize, the women would lead the way.Journalists made Annie the Joan of Arc of America.Annie is helped by Eva, who over the nine months of the strike grows from a dream girl to a woman. Nationally known union organizers come to help, including 'the miner's angle' Mother Jones and the Socialist labor organizer Ella Bloor.The mine is under the management of John McNaughton, and Russell's portrait of him as a cold-hearted capitalist fixated on the bottom line is chilling. McNaughton is a xenophobe whos anti-immigrant slant hardens his heart even more. In his view, Europe is gleefully exporting its 'wretched refuse' to America, and Washington has done nothing to stop the continual labor strikes across the nation. It won't happen here, he vows.The novel had a slow start for me but picked up later. At times, I felt some distance from the events. A critical scene is off-screen when the emotional impact would have been greater through Annie's eyes. The story builds to a horrendous tragedy, describing a real event, with great emotional impact.The changing role of women and their broadening choices is shown through the characters. And there is romance, from infatuation and unhappy marriages to illicit affairs and true love. It was interesting to learn more about this slice of Michigan history and the history of unionizing in Michigan. I received a free ebook from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for a fair and unbiased review.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Having previously read another book by Mary Doria Russell, I knew that this newest novel would be a pleasure to read and I was not disappointed.The story takes place in Calumet, Michigan and centers around the lives of copper miners and the horrible conditions they had to endure in the early 1900’s. After one accident too many, the women decide they have had enough worrying over the safety of their men and gather together to bring about change. Annie Clements, nicknamed “Big Annie” due to her height, emerged as the leader of the group of women. They join forces with the Union and begin to recruit members, eventually helping to orchestrate a strike that lasted several months.Tensions rise as the strike lasts longer and longer, with several Union workers ending up getting arrested, injured or worse. The strike and Annie’s work with the Union also begins to take its toll on her marriage.This is another great work of historical fiction that prompted me to find out more. Annie Clements was a real life American Labor activist and was inducted into the Michigan Hall of Fame. It’s so inspiring to read about women who made a difference in the lives of others and most especially the lives of the future generation.Many thanks to NetGalley and Atria Books for allowing me to read an advance copy and give my honest review.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    4.5 Such amazing courage in the face of despair able odds. That's what my thought was when I finished this book. A twenty five year old Roman who took on a copper Baron. The year was 1913 and changes were coming to the mine, but not good ones. One man drills were not only dangerous but would cost many men their jobs. The company owned them, here in Calumet on the peninsula of Michigan. Owned their houses, the stores, the banks and almost everything within view. A death, will be the impetus to strike, and to strike now.We will meet Mother Jones whose indefatigable spirit will lend support and money. A Union organizers, and a photographer, and another woman who comes from afar, to support and bring a fresh infusion of cash. Most of all, we will meet Annie, and many other strong, amazing women. A grim novel, some scenes touch the heart, but all history isn't pretty. Most isn't. We meet a man without a heart or a soul. Incredibly well researched, something this author is noted for, it brings us a time when workers had little power. I think sometimes we forget the horror these early unionizers went through to insure we were treated fair by employers. Strikes that led to changes in labor laws. Just like the women who fought to bring women the vote, these women, these workers should always be remembered.ARC from Edelweiss.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In 1913, Annie Clements (Clemenc) has had enough of seeing men risk their lives for a company who pays them barely enough to survive. She sick of the death that can happen at any time. Though the majority warns her she has taken on more than she can shoulder, she is determined to see justice.I love a book that entertains me and, at the same time, teaches me something about history. I didn't know much about mining in Michigan, so I was intrigued when I began reading. I came away knowing more about the time period and the fight that happened for better working conditions.The blending of fact with fiction was excellent. I am thankful for the author's note at the end that explained what had really happened and what was fiction.This is not for the fainthearted. Annie's husband is abusive. The tactics of strikebreakers are bloody. The treatment of suffragettes of the time is incorporated into Annie's arrest. Not to mention the tragedy that occurred five months into the strike.I unreservedly say this is a fitting telling of the strong women who took on a copper baron! I would recommend this to readers of historical fiction based on fact.I received a free copy through NetGalley for reviewing purposes. This book is due to be released in August, 2019.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Novelization of the efforts to unionize the copper miners in Calumet, Michigan in the early 20th century with special emphasis upon the women in the area. Includes the Italian Hall Disaster and real-life organizer Annie Clements (Clemenc) Well-written and thought-provoking with many applications for today, it is weakest when the author conjures up personal feelings, romance, and relationships. With so many nonfiction/fiction hybrids, this reader was left wondering where the truth and ended and began. I wish Russell had written a nonfiction book and included photographs.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Mary Doria Russell's latest is a story that sneaks up on you, like an earthquake where there's almost no warning of what's to come. Like some of her other works, this one is grounded in true historical accounts of the lives of immigrant copper miners in Michigan's upper peninsula at the start of the 20th century.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    1913 struggle of a labor union of copper miners in Michigan to win for themselves better pay and better working conditions. The nine-month strike was led by Annie Clements and wives of the miners. Gave me a feel of what those people went through. I appreciate all the more the working conditions of today. The owner of the copper mine was a real Dickensian villain; the author stated in he afterword he was as horrible in real life as he is in this novel. Very well written, with sympathetic characters.Highly recommended.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Oh what a great book. The poor get poorer and the rich get richer. you know why? Read this book, it is an excellent account of money over whelming the need to see the humanity in all of us. A novel based on fact, but it brings to life the philosophies that stand between us. Oh yeah. Mary Doria Russell is the greatest writer I have ever encountered in all my years of reading.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This should be compelling but I was not compelled. A minners' strike in early 20th century Michigan upper peninsula is a difficult setting to sell and this retelling focuses too much on one woman and personal issues but not convincingly. The growth arc of the young woman Eva gets more interesting as the book goes on,

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A very well researched piece of historical fiction set in the upper peninsula of Michigan, and populated with strong female characters, this is an excellent read. Copper mining, union organization, the role of women, and the tragic Italian Hall tragedy are just a few reasons to read this book. The story inspired thoughtfulness about the courage and cost of standing up for one's beliefs.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Historical fiction about Anna Klobuchar Clements and the 1913 miners strike in Calumet, Michigan. Russell has done a great job of researching the historical issues that created that event. It is a good example of the brutal resistance to organized labor in the early 20th century. Several historical figures are introduced. It was fun to look some of them up in Wikipedia as they came up in the story.I highly recommend this one.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A tragic part of history is brought to life in this vividly detailed historical novel. Written from multiple points of view, this page turner covers the events that unfolded in Michigan's small Upper Peninsula town of Calumet resulting in the copper strike and the heartbreaking aftermath.The author used a well researched, fact based framework to build the fascinating and poignant story of Anna Clemenc (Clements) and the people of Calumet during the U.S. labor movement era. Much of which, sadly, is still relevant today.The copy I read included author's notes and a Q&A section, which was as interesting as the story itself. I highly recommend this book for anyone interested in this portion of history and/or women's history.

    1 person found this helpful

Book preview

The Women of the Copper Country - Mary Doria Russell

Prologue

Turn tears to fires

—Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

The dream is always simple. The memory never is.

It’s an echo from 1903 when she was almost sixteen. A rare family outing down to the county fair in Houghton, Michigan.

Her father probably expected the excursion to cheer her up. There were horse races and ox pulls, all day long. A merry-go-round and a Ferris wheel. Games of chance. Vendors calling their wares. Quilts, pies, and jams vying for blue ribbons. The promise of fireworks after dark. But there were crowds as well. Strangers. People who’d never before seen the girl called Big Annie up in Calumet.

At twenty-five, Anna Klobuchar Clements would be known around the world as America’s Joan of Arc. Ten thousand miners would march behind her in a wildcat strike against the richest, most powerful copper company on earth. But that day at the Houghton fair? She was just a big, gawky girl—tired to tears of being pointed at, remarked upon, ridiculed.

Being tall didn’t bother her when she was five. She liked being the biggest in her kindergarten class. She liked school. She didn’t mind at all when the teachers started calling her Big Annie. It never occurred to anyone that she might be embarrassed by the nickname. It was simply meant to distinguish her from another—much smaller—Annie in her class.

The tall American daughter of tall Slovenian parents, Anna Klobuchar had topped six feet at fifteen. In a mining town increasingly populated by underfed, undersized immigrants fresh off the boat, she could never escape the goggle-eyed notice. The endless, stupid teasing of boys her own age was the worst. As she got taller, they began to feel diminished by her. Intimidated. Irritated by the existence of a girl who was bigger and stronger than they were.

Her younger sister, Maritza, was already engaged. She was barely fourteen but she would marry in a month, long before she reached her full height and got bigger than her husband. And Annie was supposed to be happy about it.

So. That awful county fair in 1903. Which was supposed to cheer her up.

Everybody stared. Grown men came to a stop and demanded, "Jeez, how tall are you anyways?" as though her height were both a marvel and an affront. Women and girls shook their heads and gave silent thanks that they themselves were dainty little things, or at least appeared so when compared to that poor girl. Boys laughed and pointed, calling out familiar taunts, along with new ones that were more hateful. Freak. Giant. Monster. Holy cripes! Look at the size of her! Oughta be in the sideshow with that bearded lady . . .

She stood it as long as she could. Finally, a couple of hours before dusk, she fled toward the cornfields and cherry orchards and pastures beyond the fair. Her sight was still blurred with tears when she heard her father’s voice, just behind her. Anna, don’t—

She shattered into frustrated, embarrassed, angry weeping. When the storm passed, she sucked in snot and wiped her nose on the back of her hand and waved toward the crowds. I’m taller than every boy in Calumet. I’m probably taller than every boy in Michigan! Nobody will ever marry me. Why do I have to be so tall?

Your mother’s tall, he said. She got me.

Which didn’t help.

It was a relief to the pair of them when they were startled by the hushed roar of a gas-fired burner behind them, just over a little hill. They turned, and looked up, and saw a huge balloon rising. Red, white, and blue silk, billowing.

Let’s go for a ride, he suggested. Just us. Me and you.

Years later, she would ask herself, Where did he find the wisdom? But that day in Houghton, she wondered where he’d found the cash. Tickets were a day’s pay—each—for a copper miner. She tried to talk him out of it. They both knew her mother would be infuriated by an indulgence like that; nevertheless her father told the balloonist, Two, and handed him the money. Together they clambered up and over the edge of a big wicker basket and waited for the other passengers to do the same. The balloon would be tethered— So you won’t drift out over the lake! When the basket was full of paying customers, the pilot released the moorings. There were little shrieks of excitement and fear when the basket rocked off the ground. Everyone ducked and laughed nervously when the pilot opened the burner for a fresh blast of heat. And then . . . no sound except for their own breathing as the huge balloon lifted them higher and higher, its colors aglow in the slanting sunlight.

Below them, the merry-go-round and Ferris wheel seemed like wind-up toys made of tin, and people on the fairgrounds looked like tiny flowers on a vast colorful tablecloth laid out for a picnic.

Summer evenings in Upper Michigan are often brilliant with orange and purple and golden clouds. That spectacle can become ordinary to those who live in the far north. What surprised Big Annie was how pretty the land itself was when you could see it from above: greened by the scrubby brush that grew around countless tree stumps, laced by white waves edging the stony shoreline of the Keweenaw Peninsula, surrounded by Lake Superior’s blue depths.

And that is what her dream always feels like. Like floating into the silence, leaving mockery and fear and anger far below. Like soaring upward without the slightest effort and seeing an unexpectedly beautiful world stretched out in all directions . . .

In the next decade, she would more commonly awaken with her heart pounding from a different kind of dream, one in which she runs toward some urgent task, increasingly frantic because she is late and there is always an obstacle of some kind. A train blocking the road. A locked door. Knots of men standing in her way. But now and then, that dream of silent floating would come to her, like a father’s blessing. And she would remember, when she woke, what her father told her that day as they floated far above the Copper Country.

Stand up straight, Anna. Hold your head high, he told her. That’s your strength. You are tall for a reason. When your head is high, you can see farther than anyone else.

June 1913

1


Two households, both alike in dignity

—Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet

The birds disappeared when the forests went underground. There is no dawn chorus, no melodious robin-song, no cheerful cardinal-chant to greet the brightening sky. It is the first pink flush of light that rouses James MacNaughton.

The windows are open, covered only by fly screens and gauzy curtains. Rolling onto his back, stretching, he fills his chest with cool, fresh air. When he breathes out, he is awake.

Sunrise. Early summer.

Best time of the day, he thinks. Best time of the year.

His family is at their summer house on the Lake Superior shore, but James MacNaughton is a man of iron habits; even alone, he eases out of bed as though his wife were sleeping next to him and might be disturbed if he is not careful. Drawing on a dressing gown, he slides bare feet into carpet slippers and pads noiselessly down the hallway, stopping for a moment at each child’s door. The girls’ beds are made and their rooms have been neatened; still, he pictures the pillowed faces and tousled hair of his two absent daughters and smiles inwardly as he continues toward the bathing room.

His morning rituals never vary. Nearing fifty, he is determined to remain fit and limber. Ten minutes of vigorous calisthenics start every working day. To accommodate this healthful habit, two small rooms formerly used by servants have been combined to create a large bathing and exercise space. The servants have been moved to a new wing at the back of the property; this change has achieved a more decorous division between family and staff, well worth the disruption endured as the house was remodeled.

Tiled in gleaming white ceramic, the bathing room is equipped with porcelain fixtures and a modern chrome-piped shower stall that was his own particular requirement. There is a clock on the wall but, like the bathtub, only the ladies of the house use it. Years of time-and-motion studies have given James MacNaughton an uncanny sense of the exact duration of any interval between a single second and a full hour.

When he reaches the ninth minute of exercise, he pauses to turn the sink tap, bringing heated water up from the boiler in the cellar. Sixty seconds later, he begins his shave, having determined that buying blades for a Gillette safety razor is more efficient and economical than wasting time and money at a public barbershop. He showers next, methodically soaping his body: center, left, right. A rotation of 360 degrees to rinse away the suds, front and back, and then he allows himself exactly one additional minute to appreciate the sensation of hot water sluicing over his shoulders.

James MacNaughton is a great believer in showers. It pleases him to have provided this sensible element of twentieth-century sanitation to those employed by the Calumet & Hecla Mining Company. Ladies like his wife and daughters might well indulge in a long soak; for hardworking men, showering away daily sweat and grime is more hygienic than sitting in murky water once a week. Accordingly, the company bathhouse has been fitted with large communal shower rooms. At the end of their shift, workers exit the mine shafts, strip off their heavy canvas work clothes, scrub with company soap, and rinse off under hot company water. Afterward, they will pass through to the lockers where their street clothes are stored, returning to company homes refreshed.

Twenty-two minutes after leaving his bed, James MacNaughton turns off the water and steps onto the bath mat. In the kitchen one flight below, coffee is percolating, its aroma rising to meet him as he rubs his skin briskly with a Turkish towel. In the adjacent dressing room, his butler is laying out clothing in the order in which it will be donned. Undergarments. Stockings and garters. A white shirt, starched and pressed. A fresh collar. Trousers, vest, suit coat, each well brushed. Shoes, buffed to a high gloss.

In the cellar, his maid has been ironing creases from newspapers: the Boston Globe, the Detroit News, and the Chicago Tribune, evening editions of which are delivered overnight on the Calumet & Hecla express train, arriving at the MacNaughton home by six A.M., along with the morning edition of the Daily Mining Gazette and the Calumet News. Having stacked all five papers neatly, the maid will lay them on the dining table to the left of Mr. MacNaughton’s place setting. His spectacles, gently polished, will be positioned above the Globe’s headline. This done, the maid will ascend the service stairway at the back of the house and make Mr. MacNaughton’s bed, finishing that task just in time to clean the bathroom only moments after her employer has moved to the dressing room, thus forestalling the development of mold or mildew.

Meanwhile, the cook will have prepared Mr. MacNaughton’s breakfast. She shares her employer’s Scottish heritage as well as his conviction that hot oatmeal is the only proper start to the day, even in midsummer. And none of your fripperies like molasses or raisins—just good, plain, hot oatmeal with a little salt and some fresh, cool cream. Unlike the rest of the staff, which is in constant flux, the cook has been with Mr. MacNaughton since 1901, when he became the general manager of Calumet & Hecla and took up residence in this home. The cook was initially puzzled and not a little resentful when her employer spent two full days analyzing her work habits. She herself has always been a methodical person and took pride in explaining why she did things in a particular manner, but she was intrigued to learn that Mr. MacNaughton was a pioneer in the field of scientific industrial management who intended to run his household just as he did the world’s largest copper mining company.

He adheres to a simple principle: minimize wasted time and motion to maximize efficiency and productivity. Everything is properly stored at the point of first use, he told her. Glassware, cutlery, and dishes were relocated to new corner cabinets, custom-built for their purpose, each forty-eight inches from the dining room table. With service items out of the kitchen, space was freed for a set of logical work stations: pantry, icebox, preparation counter, stove, sink. Every pot and pan, each mixing bowl, and all the cook’s tools are stored such that she need not take more than one step from station to station. She never wastes a moment looking for a rarely used item. Everything is where it ought to be.

It was the cook’s own idea to time the preparation of Mr. MacNaughton’s oatmeal so that it has reached the correct temperature just as he arrives at the table. He was pleased by her enthusiasm for his methods and raised her salary by a nickel a day when he noticed. It was a princely gesture and she was grateful. Twelve years ago.

*  *  *

Thirty-seven minutes after rising, James MacNaughton is dressed and on his way down to breakfast, but it is his custom to tarry on the broad staircase landing before descending to the dining room. Standing before the large window, he clasps his hands behind his back like a soldier at ease: shoulders straight and feet planted. He does not own the immense domain before him, but as general manager of Calumet & Hecla, he presides over it with viceregal authority.

The Copper Country, it’s called—written and spoken with capital letters. So remote, it is almost a nation unto itself. On maps, it is labeled the Keweenaw Peninsula, a blade of land thrusting north by northeast into the frigid waters of Lake Superior. Running lengthwise down the peninsula’s center, like the blood gutter of a bayonet, are the richest copper deposits on earth. Ancient Indians collected chunks of the red metal from streams and shallow pits: float copper so pure it hardly needed refining at all, so beautiful and malleable that it could be made into jewelry and vessels that were traded as far south as Arkansas.

The savages and the surface veins are gone now. It took Anglo-Saxons to make something useful out of the godforsaken wilderness, he thinks with pride.

With vigor and vision, men of his own kind cleared vast forests, turning pine into cordwood and maple into timber for buildings and tunnel supports. With shovels and explosives, they sank shafts and blasted out miles-long corridors and cross-cutting drifts. With hand tools and muscle, they carved out cavernous, ore-rich stopes deep within the earth. Breaking up the rock with sledgehammers, they hauled out conglomerate to be milled and smelted on the surface, where they built railways and shipyards to carry ton after ton after ton of copper ingots to factories around the globe. Copper for cooking pots and coins and buttons and candlesticks. Copper to roof buildings and sheathe the hulls of ships. Copper to alloy with tin for bronze hardware and great bronze statues; copper to alloy with zinc for brass band instruments, machinery bearings, ship fittings, and munitions. Copper for telegraph and telephone and electrical wiring, and for indoor plumbing. Copper to transform America from an agrarian backwater to a nation that will soon be more wealthy and powerful than any European empire.

Accomplishing all this in little more than half a century has been neither cheap nor easy. Mining is a lottery. How many mining companies have formed and failed since the Civil War? A hundred? Maybe more. The Keweenaw Peninsula is riddled with exploratory trenches and abandoned shafts, the landscape littered with collapsing buildings and rusting iron machinery. Today, only a dozen deep-shaft mines run in the black often enough to avoid bankruptcy; of that dozen, only three are consistently profitable. The Quincy is called Old Reliable for a reason: it has paid out every year since 1862. The Copper Range is new and benefits from modern methods and equipment. But Calumet & Hecla outshines them all, for C&H does not merely own the Keweenaw’s most productive deposits. It has the immense capital, the long experience, and the extraordinary leadership required to compete with the open-pit mines of Montana and Arizona.

What lies above the ground is equally impressive. Calumet is not a mining camp or a village or even a city, but a metropolis of forty thousand residents—an asset owned in its entirety by the company. Few things are so gratifying to James MacNaughton as showing Calumet to investors when they arrive in this remote outpost for the first time. Paris on Mars, he murmurs when jaws drop and eyes widen at the sight of the grand sandstone edifices that house professional offices, banks, elegant stores, restaurants, and hotels. A fine library provides uplifting reading material in nearly all of the thirty-some languages spoken by the miners and their families. The Civic Theater is Calumet’s crown jewel. Widely acknowledged to be the most beautiful lyceum west of New York City, it is more than worthy of the luminaries who’ve performed there: Sarah Bernhardt and Lillian Russell, Enrico Caruso and John Philip Sousa, Douglas Fairbanks and Lon Chaney.

The thriving business district is a neat grid of paved streets lined by telephone poles, illuminated by electric lamps, and served by streetcars that run around the clock. Farther out, there are orderly ranks and files of sturdy clapboard houses, built strongly enough to withstand a century or more of winter storms. These are rented to married miners for just two days’ pay per month. C&H sells the families coal, firewood, and gas at wholesale prices. Clean, clear Lake Superior water is piped into the homes for a small fee. Thus, Calumet & Hecla rewards marriage, for married men are steadier, more dependable. And James MacNaughton always draws visitors’ attention to the industriousness of his employees’ wives, as well. Nearly every small fenced yard boasts a vegetable garden and a fruit tree or two. Some have little smokehouses and coops for chickens and rabbits. The company charges no fee when employees’ families clear fields in the outlying scrub to set up pigsties and put in stands of corn.

The cityscape is punctuated by larger buildings. Bunkhouses for the unmarried men. Shaft houses, engine houses, boiler houses; towering mill stacks reaching more than a hundred feet into the sky. In large sandstone schools, employees’ daughters learn home economics. Their sons learn trades that prepare them for jobs with C&H, and no matter how benighted their immigrant origins, those boys will be able to read their contracts in English and sign them with well-formed signatures in full legal understanding of the risks they assume by accepting work underground.

It must be acknowledged: accidents are inevitable. Metal mining is a dangerous industry, but when a man is hurt at a C&H facility, he can be treated in a well-staffed hospital. Alone among American mining corporations, Calumet & Hecla matches employee contributions to the laborers’ medical fund, dollar for dollar.

In return for this largess, C&H expects an honest twelve-hour day, Monday through Saturday. Workers have Sundays off, along with Christmas and the Fourth of July. Some merely drink their leisure away, playing billiards and gambling. This is regrettable, especially since the company encourages healthier recreation by sponsoring athletic teams and offering trophies. Baseball is popular during the Copper Country’s short summers. Hockey is the sport of choice during the exceedingly long winters, and the company offers roller rinks and bowling alleys for indoor recreation when the Great Lakes bring blizzards and snowdrifts pile up past second-story windows.

Sunday mornings, of course, ought to be spent at worship, and many employees do attend services. Indeed, James MacNaughton was gratified when the 1910 census revealed that Calumet had more churches per capita than any other town in America. For fifty years, wave after wave of immigrants have come to the Copper Country, all of them eager to work for the world’s most productive and progressive mining company. Every group has its own religious traditions; each denomination has at least one church. C&H likes its workers to be schooled in morality; the company land beneath houses of worship is, therefore, rented to the congregations at a discount. Mr. MacNaughton himself has made a point of donating generously—and anonymously—to the building campaigns for each and every new church.

Even the Catholic ones.

He is silently proud of that unheralded generosity. James MacNaughton is a modest man in many ways. Private and reserved. On guard, always, against ostentation.

The prior general manager of Calumet & Hecla displayed his wealth shamelessly, throwing grand parties and balls in the immense mansion he built as a surprise for his wife. With thirteen thousand square feet to fill, Tom Hoatson missed no opportunity for display. Every room: stuffed with furniture. Every floor: layered with Persian and Turkish carpets. Every tabletop: cluttered with exotic curios from the family’s travels to Europe, Asia, and Africa. At the housewarming gala, Tom ushered his guests from place to place like a tour guide, insisting that they admire everything from the fifteen-foot motorized turntable in the carriage house to the silver-leafed ceiling in the music room. In the library, he made sure that they noticed that the books had all been custom-bound in ostrich leather with gilt titles. No doubt, their costly spines remain uncracked to this day; Tom was never much of a reader. In any case, the mansion is too dark for such a pastime, even with all its gaslights blazing. Dimly lit even at high noon on a sunny day, its enormous stained glass windows are half-obscured by heavy velvet drapery, its walls dark green, with fanciful murals depicting the long-gone forests that were clear-cut for the mines.

The Hoatson dining room was a special horror. A graceless baronial table shipped back from Scotland. French porcelain, English silver, Bohemian crystal . . . but just try to enjoy a meal when your host urges you take particular note of the wall-coverings: elaborate Celtic knot-work hand-painted on the tanned hides of baby elephants!

Mrs. MacNaughton refused to visit the Hoatson house again after that obligatory first dinner. Later, when she and James undertook the remodeling of their own home, Tom’s tasteless monstrosity was a benchmark as they made decision after decision. A little too Hoatson, Mary would murmur when a tradesman offered something rather too showy or pointlessly luxurious. James would always agree. An elegant sufficiency has always been their mutual aim.

The result of their collaboration is a comfortably large home furnished with tasteful restraint.

Thus, when James MacNaughton descends to the ground floor, thirty-eight minutes after rising, he enters a dining room conspicuously lacking in baby elephant skin. Its walls are covered in pale gray silk, its floors hushed with a rose du Barry carpet. Morning sunlight through its eastern windows is softened by fine linen curtains ornamented only with borders of embroidered vines. His oatmeal is served in plain white bone china, and he eats in silence with a simple silver spoon, polished to a soft shine.

He eats in blessed silence but allows his spoon to clink against the china when he is done: a signal to the maid, who appears promptly to remove his bowl with her left hand and to pour his coffee from the pot in her right. With the table cleared, he places his spectacles on the bridge of his nose, pulls the papers close, and scans the news of the day.

There has been a decisive battle in the Philippines. Black Jack Pershing has slaughtered two thousand Moros, along with their women and children. That should put an end to Moslem resistance to American rule, he thinks, and it’s about time.

Kaiser Wilhelm II is celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of his ascension to the German throne. These have been twenty-five years of peace, the Kaiser is quoted as saying, and I hope there will be twenty-five more. MacNaughton grunts at that with soft cynicism. The Germans have just launched a powerful new battle cruiser. All of Europe is preparing for the next war, and so are industrialists around the world. MacNaughton himself is so sure of this, he has increased C&H production quotas. Every bullet fired and every artillery shell exploded must be encased in brass. Each ship sunk will take copper cladding and brass fittings down with her. He wants Calumet & Hecla ready to take orders as replacement armaments are manufactured.

The Tribune has an editorial about South Africa’s new Natives Land Act. The Parliament has now defined which territories can be owned by whites and which inhabited by blacks. There’s wisdom, MacNaughton thinks. Settle it with laws. Everyone will know his place. He approves of South Africa’s new Immigration Act as well. More sensible to prevent trouble than to cope with hordes of Indian migrants after they arrive. Would that America’s own Congress were so far-sighted!

James MacNaughton has become increasingly alarmed by the degradation of the workforce in the past thirty years. In the old days, C&H employed experienced men from Cornwall and Ulster, the inheritors of generations of mining skills. Those were fine men who took pride in the risks and hard work of their profession. Under the watchful eye of the company that employed them, they quietly and harmoniously developed into self-respecting American citizens. The new people are simply not of the same caliber.

For that distressing reality, James MacNaughton blames a long period of peace, which has permitted Europe’s poor to breed beyond that continent’s capacity to employ and feed them.

Swedes, Danes, Norwegians. Poles, Russians, Czechs—they’re all showing up in Calumet now. Swarms of Jews and Italians are arriving at America’s ports, taking over the cities. How much of the Old World’s excess population can America absorb?

Admittedly, those enterprising enough to make the long trek to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan are probably the best of the lot. They work hard but they are unskilled. At best, they can put a sledgehammer to the loosened conglomerate, shovel it into tram cars, and push the loads to the collection points. And yet, they feel themselves hard done by, complaining about the conditions underground when they’re lucky to have any job at all.

The Finns are the worst. And the Slavs! Croats and Slovenians. Anarchists, half of them. Socialists. Europe is gleefully exporting its wretched refuse to America. How long, he wonders, before the entire American workforce is undermined and replaced by nihilists and hoodlums? There is bloodshed every time union agitators infiltrate an industry, and what does Congress do about it? Nothing! Congress is too busy destroying American corporations. Call something a monopoly, and you can break it to pieces and tell yourself it’s legal. Damned Marxists . . .

That egomaniac Roosevelt and his stooge Taft are gone now, and may trust-busting and corporate taxes go to hell with them! Wilson may not be much better. During the 1912 campaign, he was pleased to declare himself a fierce partisan of the Open Shop policy and of individual liberty, but his anti-union rhetoric began to shift as soon as he took office. Now the new president speaks of a heartless economic system in which a few men control the fate of all the rest. He talks of overthrowing the bosses and putting Wall Street in its place. There has been one strike after another since the inauguration, and Wilson has done precisely nothing to stem the tide of industrial strife. Every labor dispute is dealt with as though it were an isolated phenomenon. Nothing is learned from experience. There is no canon of industrial law, nothing to enshrine a property owner’s sacred right to protect his factory from violent strikers.

James, his wife would soothe if she were home. Don’t upset yourself, dear. Our miners know that they’re well treated. They know how lucky they are to be employed by a man like you.

With a deep breath, he sets the newspapers aside. Stands and tugs his waistcoat down. By an act of will, he is serene again. The Western Federation of Miners will gain no foothold in the Copper Country of Michigan, he tells himself. Miners here will be loyal to Calumet & Hecla, and to James MacNaughton himself.

The butler meets him at the door with his hat and an umbrella. A year ago, the man would have said, The weather service predicts rain, sir, but James MacNaughton put a stop to that. Unnecessary chatter annoys him almost to fury, especially in the morning. Obviously, he observed then, or you would not be handing me an umbrella. Now he simply accepts his hat and hooks the umbrella handle over his arm. His first words of the day are an acknowledgment of service properly rendered.

Thank you, he says.

He will not hear the collective sigh of relief that ends the tension inside his home when the front door closes behind him. Arms full of linens, the latest chambermaid watches Mr. MacNaughton stride down the long straight sidewalk toward his office, a few blocks away.

I bet he don’t even know your name, she tells the butler.

With an attitude like that, the butler thinks, you won’t last long in this household. It is our place to know his, he tells the girl.

*  *  *

Like James MacNaughton, Anna Klobuchar Clements awakens before dawn; unlike him, she has no memory of birdsong. The forests were gone long before she was born. She expects only silence in the summer morning.

Her spouse, too, is missing from her bed. Mary MacNaughton won’t return to Calumet until the end of the summer, but Joe Clements will be home after the night shift, and Annie has much to do before he walks in the door.

In half-darkness, she peers briefly into a small mirror, loosening the heavy braid that falls down her back, gathering the brown hair into a pile on top of her head, pinning it out of her way before washing her face in a white enamel basin. She dresses quickly: a secondhand cotton housedress, its cuffs and hemline lengthened with calico bands to accommodate her frame. Trying not to make any noise that will disturb the last minutes of rest for her three young boarders, she creeps down the creaky wooden stairs, ducks under the doorway, and slips out back to use the privy.

With the sun on the horizon, she picks dandelion greens, giving the tough outer leaves to the rabbits, collecting the tenderest in her apron pocket for Joe’s salad. She scatters feed for the chickens and robs their nests while they scratch in the dirt. With the eggs cushioned by the greens in her pocket, she collects an armful of small wood for the stove and goes back inside to bring up the fire.

She’s been making pasties for miners since she was six. Her hands need no attention. Flour, salt, lard, water, mixed and kneaded. Fist-sized chunks rolled out into disks. Finely minced smoked ham from last year’s hog. Diced potatoes, onion, carrots, and turnips. Stir it all together. Spoon some onto each circle of dough. Fold the crusts into half-moons, crimp the edges, slit the tops to let the steam out. With the baking sheets greased, it’s pasties into the oven, and while they bake, she starts the boarders’ breakfast. Fried potatoes and onions, eggs, buttered bread. Tea.

She does as many chores as she can before anyone else is stirring. Five adults share this small house. Even the little Irish housewives complain, Not enough room t’swing a cat when everyone’s t’home. And it’s worse for Big Annie, who takes up more space than any woman has a right to.

She admitted to six foot one when she finally married at eighteen. Joseph Clements was twelve years her senior and four inches taller, and the only man in Calumet who wasn’t intimidated by a girl that huge. He’s big enough to beat her when she needs it was the joke at their wedding party. Joe’s a Slovene, too. His family name used to be Clemenc, but like

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1