Note: The following is adapted from the author's forthcoming book,
Injustices: The Supreme Court's Nearly Unbroken History of Comforting
the Comfortable and Afflicting the Afflicted.
In 1894, Chicago
was the Midwest's gateway to the rest of the United States. Twenty-four
different railroad lines centered or terminated in Chicago, covering the
nation in over forty thousand miles of rail. Farmers, merchants,
craftsmen and factories hoping to bring their goods to the rest of the
nation - and potentially, to the rest of the world - had to first bring
those goods to Chicago to begin their journey down one of the city's
many rail lines. Without Chicago's railroads, much of the country lost
its access to the nation's commerce and was essentially plunged back
into a pre-industrial economy.
On May 11, 1894, a strike began
just outside of Chicago in a company town run by one of the wealthiest
Americans who has ever lived. By the strike's bloody end, up to a
quarter of a million workers joined together in solidarity with the
strikers. Two federal judges, working in close collusion with federal
officials who were themselves very much in league with Chicago's
railroad executives, would place the full power of the federal judiciary
on the side of union-busters. President Grover Cleveland, acting on the
advice of the railroad attorney he placed at the head of the Justice
Department, would eventually send federal troops to Chicago. At the
height of the conflict, Harper's Magazine claimed that the nation was
"fighting for its own existence just as truly as in suppressing the
great rebellion" of the Confederacy.
And all of this happened
because of two decisions made by just one man, George Mortimer Pullman,
founder of the Pullman Palace Car Company. The first was the decision of
Pullman and his company to cut its payrolls by nearly 40 percent, even
as he increased the stock dividends his company paid to himself and its
other shareholders. The second was Pullman's utter refusal to deal with
the union that represented his workers. In an America with no modern
labor laws requiring management to come to the bargaining table with
their workers, Pullman's workers had no option other than a strike. And
that strike would eventually escalate into a conflict that brought
Chicago - and the nation's entire economy - to its knees.
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