The Kern Resolution, sponsored by Sen.
John W. Kern (D) of Indiana and adopted on May 27, 1913, called for an investigation into the then ongoing
Paint Creek–Cabin Creek strike of 1912 in West Virginia.
The resolution would "seek to determine if a system of
peonage existed in the strike zone, if immigration or postal laws were being violated, if strikers were being prosecuted contrary to Federal law, and if certain other conditions existed."
References
(1913)
55 Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen's Magazine 51, 52 and 229
"Sifting West Virginia Wrongs" (1913)
46 The Literary Digest 1259 and 1260 (7 June 1913)
"Senate Votes to Study West Virginia Mining Conditions" (1913)
30 The Survey 321
Charles Phillips Anson. A History of the Labor Movement in West Virginia. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 1940. Page 223.
Google
Otis K Rice and Stephen W Brown. West Virginia: A History. Second Edition. The University Press of Kentucky. 1993.
p 226 et seq.
David Alan Corbin (ed). Gun Thugs, Rednecks, and Radicals: A Documentary History of the West Virginia Mine Wars. 2011.
p 230.
Virginia Haughton, "John W Kern: Senate Majority Leader and Labor Legislation, 1913-1917" (1975)
57 Mid-America: An Historical Review 184 at 188 and 189 (July 1975)
Claude G Bowers. The Life of John Worth Kern. The Hollenbeck Press. Indianapolis. 1918. Pages 239, 241, 297 and 320 and passim.
Google
Dale Fetherling. Mother Jones: The Miners' Angel. Southern Illinois University Press. Carbondale and Edwardsville. 1974. Reprinted 2010. pp
99 to 101.
Philip S Foner (ed). Mother Jones Speaks: Collected Writings and Speeches. Monad Press. 1983. Pages 161, 162, 225, 340, 492, 589 and 597.
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Michael P Riccards, Cheryl A Flagg. Woodrow Wilson as Commander in Chief. Macfarland & Company, Inc, Publishers. Jefferson, North Carolina. 2020.
p 253.