Oscar Neebe

Oscar Neebe
Oscar W. Neebe (1850-1916)

Oscar William Neebe I (July 12, 1850 – April 22, 1916) was an anarchist, labor activist and one of the defendants in the Haymarket bombing trial.

Contents

Early life

Neebe was born on July 12, 1850 in New York City, a son of German immigrants of French Huguenot origin from Kassel, Germany. He had two brothers, Conrad Neebe, who moved to Boston and Louis, who moved to Chicago. The family went back to Hesse Kassel for their children's education and returned to the United States in 1864. Neebe worked for a time manufacturing gold and silver leaf in Brooklyn, but was forced to quit for health reasons.

In 1866, he moved to Chicago, where he had a hard time until he was finally hired as a waiter in a saloon. The saloon was frequented by workers from the nearby McCormick reaper works, and it was here that her learned of the worker's plight of workers and how they were exploited. He also learned of the 8-hour working day movement. In 1868, he started working as a cook on the boats carrying iron ore across the Great Lakes. However, he soon resigned and returned to New York City.

There he became an apprentice tinsmith and later worked in factories manufacturing milk and oil cans. He encountered the realities of the 19th century working class: tenement housing with families too poor to feed themselves and children forced to work for low wages and often injured in the factories. In 1871, he heard his first speech by a communist party member.

In 1873 Neebe moved to Philadelphia, where he married Anna M. Monsees. They would have three children. In 1877, Oscar moved his family moved back to Chicago. He worked in a manufacturing plant, but was fired for daring to stand up for his fellow workers. The same year he joined the communist party. Neebe was mostly unemployed during the next two years. In 1881, he and his brother Louis opened a yeast business.

It was on his visits to bakeries and breweries that Neebe became interested in the labor movement. He also became the office manager for the Arbeiter-Zeitung, a German-language workers' rights newspaper edited by August Spies and Michael Schwab

Haymarket Riot and Trial

Neebe was not present at the Haymarket Square on the day of the meeting and subsequent bombing, and stated that he was not even aware it had happened until he was told about it the following day. When he heard that Spies and Schwab had been arrested in connection with the bombing, he took over management of the Arbeiter-Zeitung. He was himself arrested only a few days later because of his association with the defendants and the Arbeiter-Zeitung.

At trial, the evidence against Neebe was particularly weak, as even the State's Attorney reportedly admitted.[1] The evidence presented against him was based on his political views and that he had attended socialist meetings, was associated with Arbeiter-Zeitung, and that a shotgun, a pistol and red flag were found in his home. One witness claimed that he had been seen distributing the famous "Revenge" Circular,[2]. Neebe insisted he had only handed him one that he found and hadn't even read himself.

Despite this, Neebe was sentenced to 15 years in prison. In his final address to the court, he declared: "There is no evidence to show that I was connected with the bomb-throwing, or that I was near it, or anything of that kind. So I am only sorry, your honor-that is, if you can stop it or help it-I will ask you to do it-that is, to hang me, too; for I think it is more honorable to die suddenly than to be killed by inches. I have a family and children; and if they know their father is dead, they will bury him. They can go to the grave, and kneel down by the side of it; but they can't go to the penitentiary and see their father, who was convicted for a crime that he hasn't had anything to do with. That is all I have got to say. Your honor, I am sorry I am not to be hung with the rest of the men."[3]

While serving his sentence, his wife Meta died in 1887. He was promised he could attend her funeral, but finally he was not allowed to go. On June 26, 1893 Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld pardoned Neebe and two of his co-defendants, having concluded that they were innocent.

Later years

Neebe remarried the year he was released. He had three more children with his new wife Regina Hepp. Neebe, who had been involved with (and then expelled from) the Socialist Labor Party and active in the trade union movement prior to the Haymarket Affair, joined the Industrial Workers of the World soon after its founding in 1905. He was listed as one of their main speakers in Chicago for Labor Day, 1906, and attended the union's 1907 Convention. He spent his final years quietly as a saloonkeeper, and died in Chicago on April 22, 1916 at the age of 65.

Neebe was buried at the Haymarket Martyrs' Monument in German Waldheim Cemetery in Forest Park, Illinois.

References

  • Oscar Neebe Autobiography
  • 1880 US Census with Louis Neebe in Chicago
  • 1900 US Census with Oscar Neebe I in Chicago
  • New York Times; March 9, 1887; page 12. Chicago, March 8, 1887. Oscar Neebe, the Anarchist, will be permitted to attend the funeral of his wife, who died from apoplexy yesterday. Sheriff Matson wrote a letter to one of Neebe's friends making...
  • New York Times; March 10, 1887; Chicago, March 9, 1887. Anarchist Oscar Neebe went out into the busy world this afternoon for the first time since his conviction nearly seven months ago. His wife died a day or two ago, and Sheriff Watson to-day permitted him to go and look upon her face once more and also meet his children.
  • New York Times; March 12, 1887; Chicago, March 11, 1887. Oscar Neebe, the Anarchist, to-day selected Paul Grottkau and George Schilling to deliver the orations at his wife's funeral service in Miller's Hall Sunday.
  • New York Times; March 13, 1887; Chicago, March 12, 1887. The wife of Anarchist Oscar Neebe will be buried tomorrow, but the husband will not be there. Sheriff Matson told him when Mrs. Neebe died that he might attend the funeral and Neebe had intended to avail himself of the privilege.
  • Avrich, The Haymarket Tragedy, p. 447 (Princeton Univ. Press 1983) (refencing his attendance at the 1907 Convention)
  • Industrial Worker, July 1906 (first series), p. 6 (Joliet, Ill.) (listing as speaker for Labor Day)

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