- The cover of the sheet music for one of Hill's final songs. Unlike most of his songwriting, which parodied popular tunes, he composed the music for this one. Mourners sang it at both of his funerals, in Salt Lake City and Chicago.
- Hill at nineteen, about the time he developed a nearly fatal case of tuberculosis. (Courtesy Barrie Stavis)
- The funeral procession outside West Side Auditorium in Chicago on Thanksgiving day, 1915. Some thirty thousand people were said to jam the streets "from curb to curb for over a mile." The IWW later sold this picture as a souvenir postcard. (Labadie Collection, University of Michigan)
- Wobbly pallbearers at Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, November 25, 1915. (Courtesy Barrie Stavis)
- The ninth edition of The Little Red Songbook, March 1916.
- San Diego police administer the “water cure” to IWW free speech demonstrators, 1912. (Labadie Collection, University of Michigan)
- The novel stickerettes represented a low-cost, high-visibility advertising campaign for the union. This ad ran on the inside cover of the Joe Hill Memorial Edition of The Little Red Songbook.
- The first of President Wilson's two requests for a stay of execution. (National Archives)
- Hill faces the five members of the Utah Board of Pardons. Solidarity, November 27, 1915.
- Hilda Erickson, center, in polka dot bathing cap, with friends and family at Saltair, the resort on the shores of the Great Salt Lake. Hilda was at the center of events on January 10, 1914, the night the Morrisons were murdered and the night Hill took a bullet in the chest. (Courtesy Susan Tuttle)
- An IWW demonstration in New York City, 1914. (Library of Congress)