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Labor Militancy. By Rachel Russo. The Great Labor Strike of 1877. Economy collapsed Wages became as low as $1 per day July 1877- wages became too low and workers refused to let trains move Officials wouldn’t make a deal, or talk to workers Strikes spread across the country
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Labor Militancy By Rachel Russo
The Great Labor Strike of 1877 • Economy collapsed • Wages became as low as $1 per day • July 1877- wages became too low and workers refused to let trains move • Officials wouldn’t make a deal, or talk to workers • Strikes spread across the country • Did what they could to end it
Haymarket • A bomb exploded during a communist worker’s meeting • Eventually, riots broke out and fed into the belief that radicals led American workers astray and that labor unions were a threat to law and order.
Homestead • Strike at Carnegie Steel Co. • The militia took over when workers fired on barges. • It took a long time for a steel workers union to form again
Pullman • Pullman Palace Car Co. town • Pullman controlled every aspect of the worker’s lives • In 1893, wages were cut, but taxes, rents, etc. stayed the same. • Strike broke out • He fired negotiators, and RR companies didn’t use the cars until the dispute was resolved