Public Event: Working People's Hidden Histories

Registration Closed

This event took place on December 9, 2021. Watch excerpts from the event below.
Bust of Apolinario Mabini atop an obelisk.
Monument to Apolinario Mabini, located in the Asan Beach unit of War in the Pacific National Historical Park, Guam.

What monuments are missing from the commemorative landscape?

What memorials have histories that are obscured or forgotten?

What do these silences tell us about the hidden histories of working people, especially the invisibility of women’s work from sites of memory and contemporary labor struggles?

This event examines monuments that relate to working people’s hidden histories. At the War in the Pacific National Monument on Guam are two memorials to Filipino revolutionary leader Apolinario Mabini (1864 -1903). Speakers will explore how the arrival of Filipino/a workers in the years after World War II led to the creation of these sites, and also examine the memorials' significance and meaning over time.

Between the Civil War and World War II, the most famous female labor activist in the United States was Mary Harris Jones, better known as Mother Jones. Despite longstanding efforts, there is no federal monument or memorial recognizing her contributions to labor rights. Speakers will discuss the ongoing work to commemorate her life, including both the push to make Mother Jones’ grave in the Union Miners Cemetery in Mount Olive, Illinois, a National Historic Landmark, and the campaign to dedicate a statue to Mother Jones in Chicago.

Event speakers will also address how labor activism today might connect to public history sites, especially contemporary Asian American and Pacific Islander worker organizing campaigns.

Mother Jones, standing, speaks to a group of assembled miners.
Mother Jones speaks to an assembled crowd in Montgomery, West Virginia in 1912 ahead of the Paint Creek Miners Strike.

West Virginia University

The event is co-sponsored by the Kalmanovitz Inittive for Labor and the Working Poor (KI) at Georgetown University and Women Innovating Labor Leadership (WILL) Empower. Speakers include: Josephine Ong (PhD Candidate in Gender Studies, University of California, Los Angeles); Dr. Rosemary Feuer (Professor of History, Northern Illinois University); and Alvina Yeh (Executive Director of the Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance (APALA) and Institute for Asian Pacific American Leadership & Advancement (IAPALA). Dr. Lane Windham, Associate Director of the KI, will moderate the discussion.

**Tune in ten minutes before the event starts to see a slideshow of other NPS-affiliated sites that illuminate hidden histories of labor.**

"Monumental Labor" is a three-part public event series that explores the memory of work and working peoples in National Parks through their representation in monuments and memorials. The series is organized by NPS Mellon Humanities Fellows Dr. Eleanor Mahoney and Dr. Emma Silverman, and it is made possible by the National Park Foundation with funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Last updated: February 7, 2022

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