0:00
/
0:00

Yo, Miss! Office Hours: The Stories They Want to Erase

Mother Jones and the Power of Raising Hell
3
5

Meet Mary Harris “Mother” Jones—once called “the most dangerous woman in America.” She wasn’t a politician. She wasn’t a general. She was a widowed Irish immigrant who turned her rage into a righteous crusade for workers’ rights.

After losing her husband and children to yellow fever and watching her dress shop burn in the Chicago Fire, Mother Jones didn’t just survive—she fought.

By the late 1800s, she was organizing coal miners, leading massive strikes, and marching child laborers right up to the doorstep of President Theodore Roosevelt.

She called out capitalism, demanded dignity for workers, and fearlessly spoke truth to power in a time when women weren’t even allowed to vote!

She didn’t care about playing nice—she cared about justice.

“Pray for the dead,” she said, “and fight like hell for the living.”

So why is she left out of so many history books? Because she reminds us that real change doesn’t come from the top down—it comes from relentless pressure from below. From the women, workers, and radicals who refused to be silenced.

And we need her spirit now more than ever, as Trump and Republicans are trying to slash Medicaid while protecting tax cuts for billionaires. The richest Americans are hoarding more than ever, while everyday people can’t afford insulin or rent. If Mother Jones were alive today, she wouldn’t be quietly writing op-eds or flying banners above Mar-a-Lago—she’d be in the streets with a bullhorn and a picket sign.

So, let’s put her story front and center where it belongs.

Go over to Share My Lesson to for the full lesson plan and worksheet.

Share this post and share her story.

Share

Leave a comment

Discussion about this video

User's avatar