During the celebration of
Armistice Day in 1919, members of the
American Legion stormed the IWW Union Hall, although it is debated who initiated the incident. The American Legion claimed that they were fired upon before they attacked the hall. The IWW claimed that the Legion attacked before they fired. The result was a fight that resulted in the deaths of six men, while others were wounded. One participant in the parade, John Earl Watts, was shot and wounded in the side by Everest and fell within a few feet of the mortally wounded Ben Cassagranda. Ironically. Watts was not a member of the American Legion but an IWW member. He had been invited to join the parade because he had served in the U.S. Army Everest escaped out the rear of the Roderick Hotel, firing at his pursuers and reloading as he ran. Legionnaire Alva Coleman grabbed a non-functioning revolver from a captured Wobbly or a nearby house and began to chase Everest. Shot and wounded by Everest, he passed the revolver to Legionnaire Dale Hubbard, a noted athlete, who caught up with Everest as the Wobbly was trying to ford the Skookumchuck River. Pointing the useless revolver at Everest, Hubbard ordered Everest to drop his gun and surrender. It is not known whether Hubbard knew his revolver was useless. Everest most certainly would have assumed it was not. Everest, unable to cross the river, turned and shot Hubbard before he was overpowered, beaten, and dragged to the town's jail. It was said that during the incident, Everest uttered, "I fought for democracy in
France and I'm going to fight for it here. The first man that comes in this hall, why, he's going to get it." During the evening of November 11, Everest was turned over to the lynch mob by jail guards, taken to a bridge over the Chehalis River, lynched and then shot. The next day his body was cut down and lay in the river bottom until sunset when his body was returned to the jail. There it lay with the rope still around his neck, in full view of the IWW members rounded up after the shootings. Later his body was buried in a pauper's graveyard in Centralia and the burial plot, the
Wesley Everest Gravesite, was officially added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1991. No one was charged with the crime even if those involved in the lynching were well known to townsfolk in Centralia. As a result of the shootings, seven IWW members were sentenced to prison terms of 25 to 40 years. The last prisoner was released in 1939. ==Castration controversy==