On
May the first, 1894, 120 years ago, a group of protesters called
“Coxey’s Army” descended on Washington to protest income inequality. It
was the first such protest the nation had ever seen. And the conditions
that led to it may sound familiar.
The year before the
1894 march, the economy had crashed catastrophically. Unemployment shot
up to over ten percent and stayed there for half a decade. In an
industrializing economy, the very idea of joblessness was new and
terrifying. There was no safety net, no unemployment insurance and few
charities. A week without work meant hunger.
Suddenly panhandlers
were everywhere. Chicago prisons swelled with men who purposefully set
out to be arrested just to have a warm place to survive the winter. The
homeless were blamed for their circumstances, thrown into workhouses for
“vagrancy,” punished with 30 days of hard labor for the crime of losing
their job. The wealthy took little pity. The fashionable attended “Hard
Times Balls,” where a sack of flour was awarded to the guest wearing
the most convincing hobo costume.
Jacob Coxey, a witty Ohio
businessman and perennial candidate for office, thought he had a
solution. He proposed a “Good Roads Bill,” a Federal project to help the
unemployed and to give the poor the work that they needed, while also
helping to maintain and improve America’s infrastructure. Coxey’s idea
was radically ahead of its time—four decades ahead of FDR’s New Deal
programs. But Coxey had faith in his plan, declaring: “Congress takes
two years to vote on anything. Twenty-millions of people are hungry and
cannot wait two years to eat.”
All kinds of people
came from all over the country to join in the march. As they made their
way to Washington, they gathered together in ever-enlarging groups that
frightened the elite with threats of class warfare.
Read about the march and find out what happened when they approached the Capitol, at Smithsonian.
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