词条 | Pullman Strike |
释义 | Pullman Strike United States history ![]() The panic of 1893 had caused the Pullman Palace Car Company to cut wages by about 25 percent. At Pullman, its company town near Chicago, no corresponding reduction was made in rents and other charges, which led to a local strike initiated May 11, 1894, by members of the American Railway Union. After the company president, George M. Pullman (Pullman, George M), had refused arbitration of the dispute, the union's national council, led by its president, Eugene V. Debs (Debs, Eugene V.), called for a nationwide boycott of Pullman cars. Sympathy strikes by union locals occurred in 27 states and territories from Ohio to California, and violence of disputed origin and intensity broke out, centring in Chicago. Governor John P. Altgeld (Altgeld, John Peter) of Illinois, sympathetic toward the strikers, refused to call out the militia. On July 2, in part acceding to railroad management requests, U.S. Attorney General Richard Olney (Olney, Richard) procured an injunction from federal judges to halt acts impeding mail service and interstate commerce; on July 4, President Grover Cleveland (Cleveland, Grover), acting on Olney's advice, ordered 2,500 federal troops to Chicago. The strike ended within the week, and the troops were recalled July 20. When Debs was convicted of contempt of court and conspiring against interstate commerce, leaders of both industry and organized labour recognized that the Sherman Antitrust Act could be enforced against unions and, even more ominous from the viewpoint of labour, federal injunctions could be employed to defeat action by the unions. |
随便看 |
|
百科全书收录100133条中英文百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容开放、自由的电子版百科全书。