Fred Mader

Fred Mader

Infobox Person
name = Fred Mader


image_size =
caption =
birth_date = 1883
birth_place =
death_date =
death_place =
occupation = Labor leader
President, Chicago Building and Construction Trades Council
spouse = Yes (name not known) [Kinsley, Philip. "Mrs. Mader Put Out of Court at Husband's Trial." "Chicago Daily Tribune." August 10, 1922.]
children = One son (name not known)"14 Years for Miller; Mader, M'Carthy Free." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 26, 1922.]
grandchildren =

Fred "Frenchy" Mader (born 1883)Kinsley, Philip. "Mader Fights to Keep Jail Record Away From Jury." "Chicago Daily Tribune." August 6, 1922.] was an American labor leader and organized crime figure active in the Chicago, Illinois, labor movement in the 1910s and 1920s. He was president of the influential Chicago Building and Construction Trades Council, a coalition of construction unions, for nine months in 1922.

Early career

Fred Mader was born in Chicago in 1883. When he was 14 years old, he went to work for a year at Marshall Field's running cash from the safe to the counters. He worked for a stock broker for three years, and then spent a year working for a company which installed light fixtures in homes and apartment buildings. He moved to New York City for nine months and worked as a fixture hanger there for nine months before returning to Chicago.

Once back in Chicago, Mader joined Local 381 of the Fixture Hangers' Union, and by 1915 was the local's assistant business agent. ["U.S. Indicts 100." "Chicago Daily Tribune." April 28, 1915.] His job was to roam construction sites, ensuring that the terms of union contracts were honored by employers. [Palladino, Grace. "Skilled Hands, Strong Spirits." Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2005. ISBN 0801443202]

Mader also became involved with organized crime. He was an associate of Timothy D. "Big Tim" Murphy, a mobster and labor racketeer who controlled several major railroad, laundry and dye workers' unions during the 1910s and early 1920s. [Cohen, Andrew Wender. "The Racketeer's Progress: Chicago and the Struggle for the Modern American Economy, 1900-1940." Cambridge, Mass.: Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN 052183466X] In 1915, Mader was accused in court testimony of asking local business owners for protection money in exchange for not having their expensive glass windows constantly broken. ["Declares Glass Firms Assisted Labor Wreckers." "Chicago Daily Tribune." June 23, 1916.] Mader was sentenced to three years in prison for extortion. ["Bomb Explosion at Editor's Home Laid to Labor." "Chicago Daily Tribune." August 2, 1916.]

After his release from prison, Mader rose quickly within Local 381, becoming its president."Curran Resigns Presidency of Trades Council." "Chicago Daily Tribune." February 18, 1922.] He was also influential in the electrical workers' union. Mader's growing importance and power within Chicago's labor movement led him to be elected president of the Chicago Building and Construction Trades Council (BCTC) on February 17, 1922. A split had emerged in the BCTC over whether to accept an arbitration award lowering wages throughout the city's construction industry, and the faction opposing the award was ousted from its leadership positions. [Haber, William. "Industrial Relations in the Building Industry." New York: Ayer Co. Publishing, 1978. ISBN 0405029233] It was later alleged that Mader won election as BCTC president due to the strong-arm tactics of "Big Tim" Murphy.Kinsley, Philip. "Terror Rule of Mader Rings Told in Court." "Chicago Daily Tribune." July 26, 1922.]

Presidency of the BCTC

Just six weeks after his election, Mader was indicted for assault with a deadly weapon after allegedly attacking an electrician who had performed work assigned to the fixture hangers."Mader and Four Others Indicted In Labor Inquiry." "Chicago Daily Tribune." March 30, 1922.] Mader strongly denounced the indictment, pointing out that the alleged victim had not bothered to file charges or show up in court as a witness, and that an employer's secretary had lodged the complaint with the police.

On May 6, 1922, Mader, Murphy, Cornelius Shea, and six other labor leaders were arrested and charged with the murder of a Chicago police officer. On May 24, the state asked for nolle prosequi and the court agreed to withdraw the indictments. ["200 Labor Chiefs Arrested in Chicago After Two Policemen Are Shot Dead And Industrial Plants Are Bombed." "New York Times." May 11, 1922; "Labor Chiefs Seized in Effort to End Murders by Gangsters." "Chicago Daily Tribune." May 11, 1922; "Rush To Indict Chicago Laborites." "New York Times." May 12, 1922; "Eight Labor Chiefs Indicted in Chicago to Block Release." "New York Times." May 12, 1922; "Raid Bomb Factory in Chicago's War on Labor Terror." "New York Times." May 13, 1922; "Get New Evidence On Labor Bombings." "New York Times." May 15, 1922; "Describes Slaying of Chicago Police." "New York Times." May 19, 1922; "'Big 3' of Chicago Labor To Be Tried." "New York Times." June 10, 1922; "Shea, Member of 'Big 3,' and Two Others Get Bail." "Chicago Daily Tribune." June 13, 1922; "'Big 3' Denied Separate Trials On Terror Plot." "Chicago Daily Tribune." June 18, 1922; Kinsley, Philip. "Trial Nears Climax." "Chicago Daily Tribune." July 29, 1922.]

The trial ended Mader's presidency of the BCTC. A Chicago court refused to release Mader on bail unless he pledged to step down as BCTC president. He hesitated, but agreed on May 28, 1922, and was released on a $75,000 bond (about $982,000 in 2008 inflation-adjusted dollars). ["'Big Tim' Murphy Gets Out On Bail." "Associated Press." May 28, 1922; "Labor Chiefs Meet Bondsman on Successors." "Chicago Daily Tribune." May 29, 1922.]

During the murder trial, Mader was also indicted on a charge of conspiring to delay the construction of the Drake Hotel."Mader Offers Guilty Plea for Freedom." "Chicago Daily Tribune." June 9, 1922.] On June 8, 1922, Mader offered to plead guilty to the charge to avoid a prison term, but the plea deal was refused. During the trial, eyewitness testimony accused Mader of bribery, running a gang of "sluggers" to beat and intimidate others in the labor movement, extortion, bombings, and other crimes. Mader was convicted of this charge on June 19, 1922, and sentenced to a year in prison and a $1,000 fine. ["Jury Convicts Mader on Conspiracy Charge." "Chicago Daily Tribune." June 20, 1922; "Prison For Union Leader." "New York Times." June 20, 1922.] The sentence was overturned by the Supreme Court of Illinois in 1924. [The prosecution admitted that Mader had acted alone in pursuing illegal acts. However, the Illinois law did not specify whether a conspiracy required two people. The state supreme court held that at least two people must be involved, and voided the lower court's ruling. See: Cohen, Andrew Wender. "The Racketeer's Progress: Chicago and the Struggle for the Modern American Economy, 1900-1940." New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN 052183466X]

The state of Illinois issued a new indictment against Mader and two others in August. The charges were the murder of a police lieutenant, extortion, assault, and bombing. ["Crowe to Retry Mader, Miller, and M'Carthy." "Chicago Daily Tribune." August 15, 1922; "Mader Indicted Again With Six Labor Leaders." "Chicago Daily Tribune." September 30, 1922.]

As Mader's second murder trial began, Mader attempted to withdraw his resignation as president of the BCTC (which was to have been effective at the BCTC's regular board meeting in November)."Oust Mader." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 14, 1922.] Reacting to Mader's refusal, international unions belonging to the Building and Construction Trades Department of the American Federation of Labor, the BCTC's parent organization, acted to build a consensus against Mader, have him removed from office, and a new president elected. These efforts proved successful on November 13, 1922, ending Mader's presidency after just nine months. Edward Ryan, a business agent for the ornamental ironworkers' union, succeeded him. ["Pat Sullivan New Chief of Building Trades." "Chicago Daily Tribune." January 31, 1925.]

Mader's second murder trial opened a day after his removal as BCTC president. The Illinois Attorney General's case was somewhat weak, however, and the trial court judge rebuked the state several times on the opening day for abusing the judicial process. ["Lawyers Clash at Mader Trial." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 15, 1922.] The prosecution rested after two days. ["State Closes Second Murder Trial of Mader." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 16, 1922.] Mader's attorneys first produced a witness who not only provided an alibi for Mader at the time of the murder, but who claimed he had been taken by Chicago police to Colorado and prevented from testifying in Mader's behalf during the first trial. ["Mader Witness Kept From First Trial, He Hints." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 18, 1922; "Mystery Veil Wraps Halt in Mader Trial." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 22, 1922.] The following day, Mader's attorneys dropped a bombshell when an ex-police lieutenant testified that the Chicago Police Department had framed Mader and planted evidence used in the trial. ["Denies Dynamite 'Frameup Tale' in Mader Trial." "Chicago Daily Tribune." November 23, 1922.] The jury was unconvinced by the state's case, and Mader was declared not-guilty on November 25, 1922.

References


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