The Gilded Age: Wealth, Corruption, and the New America — Fexingo History

The Gilded Age's 1877 Railroad Strike and the Great Uprising

6 min · 26 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Gilded Age's 1877 Railroad Strike and the Great Uprising

Descripción

In July 1877, a wage cut on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad ignited the largest labor uprising America had yet seen. This episode traces the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 from its spark in Martinsburg, West Virginia, through its explosive spread to Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and St. Louis. We look at the spontaneous workers' committees that shut down rail traffic, the pitched battles with state militias and federal troops, and the shocking arson and looting that left Pittsburgh's rail yards in ashes. We explore the role of the Workingmen's Party, the first general strike in St. Louis, and the brutal suppression that killed over 100 people. The episode also examines the strike's aftermath: the building of armories, the rise of the National Guard, and how this uprising changed the relationship between capital, labor, and the state. Names like Thomas A. Scott, John W. Garrett, and Franklin B. Gowen appear alongside the anonymous brakemen and firemen who walked off the job. #GreatRailroadStrike1877 #BaltimoreAndOhioRailroad #Martinsburg #Pittsburgh #StLouis #WorkingmensParty #ThomasAScott #JohnWGarrett #FranklinBGowen #LaborHistory #GildedAge #ClassWarfare #NationalGuard #GeneralStrike #RailroadWorkers #AmericanHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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episode The Gilded Age's 1877 Railroad Strike and the Great Uprising artwork

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In July 1877, a wage cut on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad ignited the largest labor uprising America had yet seen. This episode traces the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 from its spark in Martinsburg, West Virginia, through its explosive spread to Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and St. Louis. We look at the spontaneous workers' committees that shut down rail traffic, the pitched battles with state militias and federal troops, and the shocking arson and looting that left Pittsburgh's rail yards in ashes. We explore the role of the Workingmen's Party, the first general strike in St. Louis, and the brutal suppression that killed over 100 people. The episode also examines the strike's aftermath: the building of armories, the rise of the National Guard, and how this uprising changed the relationship between capital, labor, and the state. Names like Thomas A. Scott, John W. Garrett, and Franklin B. Gowen appear alongside the anonymous brakemen and firemen who walked off the job. #GreatRailroadStrike1877 #BaltimoreAndOhioRailroad #Martinsburg #Pittsburgh #StLouis #WorkingmensParty #ThomasAScott #JohnWGarrett #FranklinBGowen #LaborHistory #GildedAge #ClassWarfare #NationalGuard #GeneralStrike #RailroadWorkers #AmericanHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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