Ohio His father, a cabinet maker, sent young Oscar to join his brother in
Cincinnati,
Ohio, where he tried his hand as a furniture maker and musician. This paper, called the
Labor World, introduced Ameringer to the labor struggles in the South, and he was soon on the front lines of a bitter labor dispute in
New Orleans,
Louisiana.
Oklahoma After briefly organizing workers in Louisiana, Ameringer moved to Oklahoma to work for the Socialist Party. In Oklahoma, he was identified with the state party's social democratic "Yellow" faction, which supported replicating the centralized organizational model established by
Victor L. Berger in Milwaukee, which was opposed by the more left-wing "Red" faction, which advocated greater decentralization. In spring of 1907, Ameringer started his first camp meeting tour of Oklahoma moving from town to town and relying on the hospitality of local farmers sympathetic to his cause. Although known for rousing speeches filled with humor and wit, Ameringer believed "something more than schoolhouse meeting, encampments and soap-box preaching was needed if the world was to be saved". He was fired from the editor position, only to move to the Socialist party's new paper, the
Oklahoma Pioneer. In
1911, Ameringer made a major push into politics running for mayor of
Oklahoma City. He gathered twenty-three percent of the vote and "came within a few hundred votes of being elected". Of course, the noted humorist described his loss as "a narrow escape both for Oklahoma socialism and [himself]". as a result of a factional struggle within the party. After another unsuccessful foray into politics in Wisconsin, in which his campaign was derailed by his arrest and indictment for obstruction of recruiting by the United States army, Ameringer decided to move again. He claims in his autobiography that "the idea behind the sensational arrests was to destroy [him and other Socialists] politically".
Oklahoma After his
Wisconsin years, Ameringer moved back down to Oklahoma to fight against a
Ku Klux Klan candidate for governor and then to Illinois in 1920 where he edited the
Illinois Miner, a publication aimed against
UMWA president
John L. Lewis. In 1931, Ameringer again returned to Oklahoma and founded what would be his last newspaper,
The American Guardian. The
American Guardian continued in existence for a decade, finally being terminated early in 1941. The paper's subscriber list was assumed by the national liberal news weekly,
The Nation, with the folksy populist Ameringer bringing his regular column to that publication's pages. ==Personal life and death==