In “Struggle for the Soul of the Postwar South: White Evangelical Protestants and Operation Dixie,” West Virginia University history professors Elizabeth Fones-Wolf and Ken Fones-Wolf chronicle the important role of evangelical Protestantism in the battle for and against union membership.

Operation Dixie was a campaign launched by the Congress of Industrial Organizations, a large labor federation that had successfully unionized the steel, auto and electrical industries in the North, to bring organized labor to the industrializing South. In their book, the two professors explore how union officials and sympathizers – as well as those seeking to halt union expansion – used religion to try and win the hearts and minds of southern workers.

“One of the important ways Southerners understand the world is through their religious views,” Ken Fones-Wolf said. “Union leaders recognized southern workers were religious. They tried to use tactics and people in organizing who could speak to that.”

Union representatives often tried to convince ministers and congregations that social gospels and Jesus preached brotherhood and a message of caring for one another —what unions claimed to represent. Conversely, business and industry officials stressed that social Christianity would lead to Soviet-style Union intrusions on freedom and control of everyday life.

The result? Churches often found themselves divided by ideology. A number of ministers opted to remain neutral in the debate, for fear of upsetting the congregation. Others were outright vocal in their support, or disdain, for labor.

“Some ministers who opposed organized labor actively preached on the pulpit,” Elizabeth Fones-Wolf said. “They said the initials for the CIO stood for ‘Christ Is Out.’”

Attempting to appeal to the religious side of working people was often aided by bribes and blackmail, with business leaders paving church lots and threatening to close down neighboring plants, or bring in strike breakers – anything to shut out unions. With that in mind, many preachers sided with business for the sake of their congregation.

The influence of the church in the South, the authors said, is not to be underestimated. The churches that appealed to northern workers tended to be more hierarchical with religious doctrine drafted at the top, then filtered through representatives to the individual churches. Denominations popular in the South allow more congregational autonomy, with separate churches following their own views.

By using campaign documents from Operation Dixie, a collection of more than 200 oral histories of workers at the time, church journals and weekly newsletters, Elizabeth Fones-Wolf and Ken Fones-Wolf said they hope to better understand why religion was such an effective tool to quash unionization of Southern industries.

“One of the things we heard in oral histories is that the religious beliefs of many workers would not support a union, but many working people nevertheless supported the New Deal,” Elizabeth said. “That doesn’t really fit with the image of the Southern worker.”

Elizabeth Fones-Wolf’s research focuses on the struggle between organized labor and business to shape the ideas and images that constituted America’s political culture. Ken Fones-Wolf is examining the role that religion plays in class relations in Appalachian industries, particularly coal and textiles. This is their first co-authored book.

-WVU-

dr/04/08/2015

CONTACT: Devon Copeland, Director of Marketing and Communication, Eberly College of Arts and Sciences, West Virginia University, 304-293-6867, Devon.Copeland@mail.wvu.edu

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