Note:
The 120th anniversary of the
outbreak of the Pullman Strike, a
pivotal event in American labor history was
yesterday. The event is so important that
I am sharing its story for the third time.
On May 11, 1894
one of the greatest battles in American labor
history erupted as employees of the Pullman
Palace Car Company walked off of their jobs to protest wage cuts. When Eugene
V. Debs and the American Railway
Union took up their cause with a national
boycott for trains with Pullman cars, the strike went nationwide. National
Guard and Federal troops were
called in to suppress the strike and “move the mails.”
1894 was the
nadir of one of those devastating financial panics that erupted with regularity in the 19th Century. Just outside
of Chicago George Pullman, a pious and leading lay Universalist famous as a benevolent and paternalistic employer
deeply cut the wages of the thousands of employees at his railway sleeping car
factory. But he did not also reduce the
rents he charged his workers for their homes in his model community or the
prices at the company stores, which were the only ones allowed to operate in
the Town of Pullman.
Some workers
found their wages reduced below what they owed in rent. Workers complained that, “We are born in a
Pullman house, fed from the Pullman shops, taught in the Pullman school,
catechized in the Pullman Church, and when we die we shall go to the Pullman
Hell.”
When a committee
went to petition Pullman for relief, they were all summarily fired. The workers, who had not been organized by
any union, went out on strike. They
petitioned Debs and the ARU for assistance.
Despite the misgivings of some of his associates, Debs felt that the
union owed the Pullman workers support.
The ARU was just
coming off of a highly successful strike against the Great Northern Railroad in which
the united power of all workers in a single industrial union instead of divided between skilled craft unions
members and unorganized laborers was demonstrated. The prestige of Debs and his union among
working people was undisputed.
Debs ordered a boycott of all trains carrying a
Pullman Palace Car. Ordinarily, this
would have affected only long distance passenger service. But the railroad companies, seeing an
opportunity, attached Pullman cars to all mail trains.
The strike
eventually involved some 250,000 workers in 27 states at its
peak. Violence erupted across the
country as workers determined to keep trains from moving. Hundreds of rail cars were destroyed and
there were pitched battles between armed railroad guards, police and National Guardsmen on one side and
strikers on the other.
Debs and the ARU
Executive Board were charged with
conspiracy to interfere with the mails.
President Grover Cleveland ordered federal
troops in to “insure that the mails move.” This was done despite the pleas of fellow Democrat, Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld, who assured the President
that local and state forces could handle the situation.
Federal troops
arrived in Chicago on July 6. U.S. Army
cavalry “escorted” strike breakers moving trains in Chicago and other cities,
charging strikers with drawn sabers.
Within days the boycott and the strike in Pullman were crushed and the
ARU shattered.
Debs and other
leaders were tried and convicted of contempt of court for interfering with the
mails and sentenced to jail. Fearing
that mobs of workers would attack the Cook
County Jail in Chicago and free the men, authorities whisked Debs and his
associates to sleepy Woodstock,
nearly 50 northwest of the city and presumed to be safe.
But Debs’ stay
in the Woodstock jail was far from unpleasant. Sheriff
George Eckert, like Debs of Alsatian
heritage, promptly made Debs and his associates trustees. They often gathered on chairs in front of the
jail to conduct education and self-improvement sessions. Debs was very fond of the Sheriff’s children
and sometime watched them for the family.
In return, Mrs. Eckert fed the prisoners sumptuous home cooked meals.
Debs conducted
the business of his dying union from the jail and entertained a string of
visitors from around the country. Among
them was a Milwaukee socialist and
future U.S. Representative, Victor Berger, who brought volumes of Karl Marx’s Das Kapital newly
translated into English for the
first time and published in Chicago by Charles
H. Kerr & Co. Armed with this
and other books like Edward Bellamy’s
popular novel Looking Backward, Debs
and his friends embarked on a systematic study and a discussion adapted from
the Platonic question and response method.
By the time his
sentence was up Debs, a Democrat who
had served as Terra Haute, Indiana City
Clerk and in the Indiana legislature,
had become a committed socialist.
When Debs was
released from jail on November 22, 1895, he was greeted by the largest crowd
ever to assemble in Woodstock, estimated to number about 10,000 and including
many local admiring locals. The cheering crowd hoisted him on their
shoulders and carried him to the railroad station two blocks away where a
special train awaited to take him to Chicago.
In the city more than 100,000 thronged to greet him.
Within a few
years Debs founded the Socialist Party,
an election oriented social democratic
party. Four times he was the Party’s
nominee for President of the United States, garnering more than three million
votes in 1912. Along the way, he was
also a founding member of the Industrial
Workers of the World (IWW), which kept his dream of industrial unionism
alive. He was a tireless orator and a
gifted writer.
In 1919 he would
return to prison under much harsher circumstances after being convicted of
giving a speech in opposition to American participation in the First World War. He ran for president a final time as an
inmate of the Federal prison at Atlanta.
Despite being
pardoned by President Warren G. Harding
in 1921, Debs’ health was broken. He
died in an Elmhurst, Illinois
sanitarium in 1926.
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