The Gilded Age: Wealth, Corruption, and the New America — Fexingo History
In the summer of 1894, a strike by workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company near Chicago spiraled into a nationwide railroad boycott that paralyzed the American economy. The Pullman strike became one of the most dramatic confrontations between labor and capital in the Gilded Age, pitting the American Railway Union led by Eugene V. Debs against industrialist George Pullman and the federal government under President Grover Cleveland. When Attorney General Richard Olney obtained an injunction against the union and President Cleveland sent federal troops to break the strike—citing the need to keep the mail moving—the conflict turned violent. This episode explores the conditions inside the model company town of Pullman, Illinois, the strategic use of boycotts by the ARU, the controversial role of the U.S. military, and the landmark Supreme Court case In re Debs that upheld the use of injunctions in labor disputes. We also look at the strike's long-term impact on labor organizing and the growing power of the federal government to intervene in economic conflicts. #PullmanStrike #EugeneVDebs #AmericanRailwayUnion #GeorgePullman #GroverCleveland #RichardOlney #LaborHistory #GildedAge #RailroadBoycott #InReDebs #Injunctions #FederalTroops #CompanyTown #LaborUnrest #1894 #PullmanIllinois #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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