Ruthenberg House: Leftist Cultural Center: Difference between revisions

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''--Carla Leshne''
''--Carla Leshne''


[[Image:Ruthenberg House 6in.jpg]]
[[Image:Ruthenberg House 6in.jpg]]  [[File:121 Haight 2010.jpg|260px|thumb|right|Empty lot today at 121 Haight]]


After the 1934 attack <br>
'''After the 1934 attack''' <br>
photo: Labor Archives and Research Center, SFSU  
 
''Photo: Sid Roger Photo Collection, Labor Archives and Research Center, SFSU''
 
[[Image:121 Haight St AAF-0627.jpg]]
 
'''121 Haight Street during 1934 gubernatorial campaign, sign opposing campaign of Frank Merriam.'''
 
''Photo: San Francisco History Center, SF Public Library''


[[category:dissent]] [[category:1930s]] [[category:Civic Center]] [[category:Labor]]
[[category:dissent]] [[category:1930s]] [[category:Civic Center]] [[category:Labor]]

Latest revision as of 18:32, 28 August 2014

Unfinished History

The Ruthenberg House at 121 Haight Street served as "the Workers Cultural Center" of San Francisco in the early 1930s. It housed the Workers' Library and Bookstore, the Workers' School, the Workers' Theater, International Labor Defense, the Workers' Sports Club, the San Francisco Film and Photo League, and a strike kitchen where food was served to strikers during the 1934 General Strike. Vigilantes attacked the Ruthenberg House in July 1934 as the General Strike was breaking out, shattering windows, and destroying the stage of the theater.

--Carla Leshne

Ruthenberg House 6in.jpg

Empty lot today at 121 Haight

After the 1934 attack

Photo: Sid Roger Photo Collection, Labor Archives and Research Center, SFSU

121 Haight St AAF-0627.jpg

121 Haight Street during 1934 gubernatorial campaign, sign opposing campaign of Frank Merriam.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, SF Public Library