Ernest C. Tanner (1889-1956)

August 01, 2008 
/ Contributed By: Dale Soden

Ernest C. Tanner|

Ernest C. Tanner

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Tacoma, Washington labor leader Ernest Charles Tanner (Ernie) was born in Indianapolis, Indiana on June 5, 1889. His father was a trapeze performer, and his mother a nurse. Moving to Tacoma with his family in 1900, Ernie Tanner attended Stadium High School where he emerged as an outstanding athlete in track, basketball, baseball, and football. He attended Whitworth College in 1908-1909, and according to the Oregonian, was the first African American to play football at the college level in the Pacific Northwest. Tanner helped Whitworth defeat the University of Oregon in 1908. After attending Whitworth, Tanner played in the local Negro League where he was captain and manager of the Tacoma โ€œLittle Giants.โ€

After college Tanner worked as a Tacoma elevator operator and in 1918, he joined the Tacoma chapter of the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) and remained a member until his death in 1956. In an era when racial discrimination was common against African Americans in the labor movement, the ILA allowed them to join; however, generally black members were treated as โ€œsecond classโ€ and, in many ports, placed into segregated locals.

Tannerโ€™s defining moment as a longshoreman came in the โ€œBig Strikeโ€ of 1934 that shut down every Pacific Coast port. He was the only African American on the Tacoma strike committee and worked closely with San Francisco leader Harry Bridges to keep black and white workers united during the strike so that employers could not break the union. In 1936 he was elected to serve as the chairman of the localโ€™s publicity committee.

Later, Tanner rose to a position of leadership in his local, serving as a trustee of Local 38-97 and on its executive board. From the beginning, Tanner insisted that African American dockworkers be paid the same wages and work under the same conditions as white longshoremen.

Curiously, in 1937, when longshoremen in other West Coast ports left the ILA and formed the International Longshoremenโ€™s & Warehousemenโ€™s Union (ILWU), Tacoma remained in the ILA, the only major local not to join the ILWU. The ILWU was a leftwing union while most (white) Tacoma longshoremen were relatively conservative. Years later, in 1958, they finally joined the ILWU as Local 23.

In 1950, the Tacoma longshoremen decided to build a new hall at 1710 N. Market St. and the localโ€™s members elected Tanner to chair the building committee. In 1996, this building was named the Ernest C. Tanner Labor and Ethnic Studies Center as part of the University of Washingtonโ€™s Tacoma campus.

Tannerโ€™s son Jack, born in 1919, graduated from law school, after working briefly on the docks with his father, and became the Pacific Northwestโ€™s first African American federal judge when, in 1978, he was named to the Federal District Court for Western Washington.

Unfortunately Ernest Tanner did not live to see his son sworn in as a federal judge. He died in Tacoma in 1956. At the time of his death, he was survived by his wife, Irene, his son, and daughter.

About the Author

Author Profile

Dale Soden is professor emeritus of history at Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington. He earned his undergraduate degree in history from Pacific Lutheran University and his M.A. and Ph.D. in American Intellectual History from the University of Washington. Soden has published widely on various subjects related to the history of the Pacific Northwest and American religious history. He has authored The Reverend Mark Matthews: An Activist in the Progressive Era (University of Washington Press, 2001), Historic Photos of Washington State (Turner Publishing, 2008), and Outsiders in a Promised Land: Religious Activists in Pacific Northwest History (Oregon State University Press, 2015). In 2020, the Washington State Historical Society selected him for the Robert Gray Award, the societyโ€™s highest award for contributions to Pacific Northwest history.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Soden, D. (2008, August 01). Ernest C. Tanner (1889-1956). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/ernest-c-tanner-1889-1956/

Source of the Author's Information:

Jack Edward Tanner Papers, Washington State Historical Society, Tacoma,
Washington; Portland Oregonian, November 1, 1908, ILWU, โ€œThe ILWU Storyโ€
at: https://www.ilwu.org/history/the-ilwu-story/

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