Allan
Pinkerton, America’s first detective
and the founder of the security company that still bears his name
was born on August 25, 1819 in Glasgow, Scotland. Admired as a
hero to some, he was despised by generations of workers as
a union buster and scab herder.
Pinkerton started as a class
conscious working man. The son of
a duty disabled policeman, he apprenticed as a cooper and participated in the Chartist movement to obtain the franchise
for working men and other political reforms. Chartist “riots” were violently
suppressed by troops in many cities.
Newly married and deeply disappointed by the failure
to achieve the vote, Pinkerton decided to immigrate to the Canada at the age of 23 in 1842. He and his wife were shipwrecked off Nova Scotia and came ashore penniless
with only the clothes on their back. A
friend tipped him off to a job at a Chicago
brewery. He worked at his trade there for five years
before relocating to rural Dundee,
Illinois nearly fifty miles northwest of the city.
He apparently wanted to go into business providing oak
wood from the abundant local woodlots to the brewery but reportedly
accidentally stumbled on a ring of counterfeiters, which he
reported to local authorities. In those
days when each bank issued their own paper notes, counterfeiting
was a common crime. Several well
organized gangs found the remote farmsteads of recently settled Kane and McHenry counties—good
places to set up operations far away from police but close enough to the city
to get their bad paper quickly into circulation.
Pinkerton began using disguises, false identities and other
tricks to track down counterfeiting gangs.
He was appointed a part time deputy
sheriff and later began to work on contract for the banks whose
notes were being counterfeited.
Pinkerton thought he had found a niche and a home.
But he also supported the Underground Railway which used the rural area as a transportation
path for the same reasons as it was chosen by the crooks. His known abolitionist sentiments led to a crushing electoral defeat
in a run for local office.
But his daring exploits chasing counterfeiters had been
picked up in the popular press.
He packed up his new reputation and returned to Chicago where he hired
himself out as a freelance detective.
Among his customers were the Treasury
Department in the pursuit of more counterfeiters and the Cook County Sheriff, who hired him to locate
two girls who had been kidnapped and taken to Michigan. He found the girls and shot one of the
captors, making headlines for his daring do.
The Sheriff hired him as a full time detective—the first
such officer in any Illinois police agency. He also continued to take private clients on
the side.
In 1855 he formed his own private agency, the North-Western Police Agency, soon to
become The Pinkerton National Detective
Agency. Its famous logo was an All
Seeing Eye with the motto “We never sleep”—thus the origin of the term private eye. Pinkerton quickly built a
large operation with many operatives
who were trained in surveillance and under-cover
operations. He demanded his operatives
keep detailed records of their cases and on all known criminals
they encountered. He kept the records,
including descriptions, aliases, known associates, and modes
of operation of hundreds of criminals. He even became the first to use photographs
to identify suspects. No other private
law enforcement agency and few public ones had anything like the manpower
or sophistication of Pinkerton’s operations.
Among the frequent
customers of the new agency were the railroads,
which is how Pinkerton came the attention of a railroad lawyer and politician,
named Abraham Lincoln. Pinkerton’s steadfast support of the Republican Party didn’t hurt
either. Lincoln tapped Pinkerton
to assist his personal friend and bodyguard Ward Hill Lamon for security as he made his way
from Illinois to Washington for his inauguration. Pinkerton operatives uncovered a plot by Confederate sympathizers to kill Lincoln as he changed trains in Baltimore and allegedly
foiled the attempt by sneaking the lanky Lincoln
through town disguised as an old woman.
As the Civil War
erupted, Lincoln learned to his chagrin that the Army had no real intelligence service. He tapped Pinkerton to become the first head of the new Intelligence Service,
forerunner of the U.S. Secret Service. Pinkerton deployed his operatives behind
the lines, often disguised as Confederate
soldiers and employed various tipsters. He personally went on some missions in enemy
territory using the name Major E.J.
Allen. He was very close to another
old acquaintance from the Illinois
Central Railroad, General George McClellan.
Unfortunately, Pinkerton consistently overestimated
the size of opposing Confederate forces by as much two times their actual numbers. That caused the cautious McClellan to avoid
battle with the main Confederate forces when possible while demanding ever
more men and arms for the President. Military
historians agree now that had McClellan moved his vastly larger and better
equipped army more quickly and with greater determination to
follow up on successes, the war could have been significantly shorter.
Pinkerton on horseback in George McClellan's headquarters provided disastrous over-estimates of Confederate numbers and strength which caused the cautious commanding general from taking decisive action.
Eventually Lincoln grew tired of both
McClellan’s dithering and Pinkerton’s exaggerations. Pinkerton left the Service after 1862, but
his agency continued to contract with the government for numerous
intelligence operations through the rest of the war.
In post war years Pinkerton’s
agencies pursued gangs of bank and train robbers, most
notoriously Missouri outlaws Frank and Jesse James. The Pinkerton
Agency got a public black eye when its men threw a bomb killing a
child and blowing the arm off the James boys’ stepmother. After an operative who got a job working on
an adjacent farm was discovered and killed, Pinkerton withdrew from the
case. He considered it the biggest failure
of his career.
Pinkerton range detectives like these played a bloody roll in range wars between Western cattle barons and small ranchers and homesteaders accused of rustling cattle.
Soon rapid post war
industrialization led to growing labor unrest. Pinkerton, the former Chartist, had no
trouble enlisting his men as strike breakers and spies against unions. One of the most famous early examples was the
infiltration of the Molly McGuires,
a secret organization of Irish
miners in the Pennsylvania
anthracite coal fields by Irish-born operative James McParland. Identities
of Molly leaders and members were passed to local employers who employed
vigilantes, who may or may not have
included other Pinkerton men, to ambush and kill them and their
families. McParland’s testimony in
court also led to the execution of six men and the destruction of
the Molly McGuires.
Pinkerton detective James McParland infiltrated the Molly Maguires in the Pennsylvania coal fields sending several to the gallows. He had a long career with the agency and years later arranged for Big Bill Haywood and Charles Moyers of the Western Federation of Miners to be kidnapped from Colorado to stand trial in Idaho on bogus charges of planting a bomb that killed a former governor.
McParland was rewarded with rapid
promotion through the company ranks and specialized in labor cases. Twenty years later he kidnapped Big Bill Haywood, Charles Moyers and
other leaders of the Western
Federation of Miners from Colorado
and took them on a sealed train to Idaho
where they were put on trial for the bombing murder of a former governor.
Pinkerton in a Harper's Weekly illustration shortly before his death.
Pinkerton died in Chicago on
July 1, 1884 at the age of 64. He fell
on the pavement and bit his tongue. It became infected and he died in agony.
By that time a huge amount of his company’s
business was anti-union activity.
Company agents were involved in the gun battle with striking steelworkers during the Homestead Strike of 1891, suppressing
the Pullman Strike of 1894, and in
the infamous Ludlow Massacre of 1914
to list only a few of the most infamous cases.
The agency also was hired by foreign
governments to suppress local radicals, most famously by Spain to work against nationalists in Cuba who included the abolition of slavery as one of their top
goals.
Dashiell Hammett became a young
Pinkerton operative before World War I and became so disillusioned by the anti-union work he was called on to do, including work that may
have led up to the lynching of Industrial Workers of the Word
(IWW) organizer Frank Little in Butte,
Montana, that the famous creator of hard-boiled detective
fiction dedicated much of the rest
of his life to supporting radical
causes.
In the 1930’s a Senate
Committee led by Wisconsin Progressive/Republican Robert M. La Follette, Jr. investigated the Pinkerton
Agency for its systematic use of spies to infiltrate labor unions. To this day Pinkerton is a curse word
to unionists and the company is still used to protect scabs and harass picket
lines.
In 1999 the Pinkerton Agency and was acquired
by the Swedish based
international security firm Securitas AB.
It merged with its
chief rival, the William J. Burns
Detective Agency, in 2001. Today it
operates as an American subsidy of the Swedish firm under the name Pinkerton
Consulting and Investigations. And the work goes on.
Very interesting, Pat. Why did he do his 180 from Chartist and abolitionist to essential union buster? Simple greed? Identification with his robber baron clients?
ReplyDeletePaul Jordan