登陆注册
5213100000048

第48章 LAW AND ORDER UPHELD(3)

Coxey's own army never amounted to more than a few hundred, but it was more in the public eye.It had a large escort of newspaper correspondents who gave picturesque accounts of the march to Washington; and Coxey himself took advantage of this gratuitous publicity to express his views.Among other measures, he urged that since good roads and money were both greatly needed by the country at large, the Government should issue $500,000,000 in "non-interest bearing bonds" to be used in employing workers in the improvement of the roads.After an orderly march through parts of Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Maryland, in the course of which his men received many donations of supplies from places through which they passed, Coxey and his army arrived at Washington on the 1st of May and were allowed to parade to the Capitol under police escort along a designated route.When Coxey left the ranks, however, to cut across the grass to the Capitol, he was arrested on the technical charge of trespassing.The army went into camp, but on the 12th of May the authorities forced the men to move out of the District.They thereupon took up quarters in Maryland and shifted about from time to time.Detachments from the Western bands arrived during June and July, but the total number encamped about Washington probably never exceeded a thousand.Difficulties in obtaining supplies and inevitable collisions with the authorities caused the band gradually to disperse.Coxey, after his short term in jail, traveled about the country trying to stir up interest in his aims and to obtain supplies.The novelty of his movement, however, had worn off, and results were so poor that on the 26th of July he issued a statement saying he could do no more and that what was left of the army would have to shift for itself.In Maryland, the authorities arrested a number of Coxey's "soldiers" as vagrants.

On the 11th of August, a detachment of Virginia militia drove across the Potomac the remnants of the Kelly and Frye armies, which were then taken in charge by the district authorities.They were eventually supplied by the Government with free transportation to their homes.

Of more serious import than these marchings and campings, as evidence of popular unrest, were the activities of organized labor which now began to attract public attention.The Knights of Labor were declining in numbers and influence.The attempt, which their national officers made in January, 1894, to get out an injunction to restrain the Secretary of the Treasury from making bond sales really facilitated Carlisle's effort by obtaining judicial sanction for the issue.Labor disturbances now followed in quick succession.In April, there was a strike on the Great Northern Railroad, which for a long time almost stopped traffic between St.Paul and Seattle.Local strikes in the mining regions of West Virginia and Colorado, and in the coke fields of Western Pennsylvania, were attended by conflicts with the authorities and some loss of life.A general strike of the bituminous coal miners of the whole country was ordered by the United Mine Workers on the 21st of April, and called out numbers variously estimated at from one hundred and twenty-five thousand to two hundred thousand; but by the end of July the strike had ended in a total failure.

All the disturbances that abounded throughout the country were overshadowed, however, by a tremendous struggle which centered in Chicago and which brought about new and most impressive developments of national authority.In June, 1893, Eugene V.

Debs, the secretary-treasurer of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, resigned his office and set about organizing a new general union of railroad employees in antagonism to the Brotherhoods, which were separate unions of particular classes of workers.He formed the American Railway Union and succeeded in instituting 465 local lodges which claimed a membership of one hundred and fifty thousand.In March, 1894, Pullman Company employees joined the new union.On the 11th of May, a class of workers in this company's shops at Pullman, Illinois, struck for an increase of wages, and on the 21st of June the officers of the American Railway Union ordered its members to refuse to handle trains containing Pullman cars unless the demands of the strikers were granted.Although neither the American Federation of Labor nor the Brotherhoods endorsed this sympathetic strike, it soon spread over a vast territory and was accompanied by savage rioting and bloody conflicts.In the suburbs of Chicago the mobs burned numerous cars and did much damage to other property.The losses inflicted on property throughout the country by this strike have been estimated at $80,000,000.

The strikers were undoubtedly encouraged in resorting to force by the sympathetic attitude which Governor Altgeld of Illinois showed towards the cause of labor.The Knights of Labor and other organizations of workingmen had passed resolutions complimenting the Governor on his pardon of the Chicago anarchists, and the American Railway Union counted unduly upon his support in obtaining their ends.The situation was such as to cause the greatest consternation throughout the country, as there was a widespread though erroneous belief that there was no way in which national Government could take action to suppress disorder unless it was called upon by the Legislature, if it happened to be in session, or by the Governor.But at this critical moment, the Illinois Legislature was not in session, and Governor Altgeld refused to call for aid.For a time, it therefore seemed that the strikers were masters of the situation and that law and order were powerless before the mob.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 快穿之自逍遥

    快穿之自逍遥

    月筱穿越各个位面,完成系统颁布的任务,收集魂力借此,永生……
  • 凌蓝雕

    凌蓝雕

    幼稚?可笑?疯狂?九百花绽,九百果结。九果惟愿,代代不息。凌蓝根作,无论之时。人性巅斓,笑傲穹空。零花纵落,几世浑浊。天界瑶宫,寂寞枷锁。人间殇阙,自在逍遥。地渊转轴,六道轮回。子规啼血,贯日长虹。且视我如何穿越三千载迷离岁月……奔泊三界望韶华不复……血溅粉土吟叶落无声……
  • 取悦你自己,才是正经事

    取悦你自己,才是正经事

    这是一本心灵励志书。以当下最流行的励志题材为主基调,在都市生活的大背景下,辅以锋利文笔,告诉人们该如何奋斗,如何去爱,以及如何去生活。整本书以“取悦自己”为独特视角,宣扬不迎合,不攀附,不将就,不求全的生活理念。针对18—35岁的读者,尤其是女性读者,注入强心剂。
  • 歌仔戏音乐三十年(1980-2010)

    歌仔戏音乐三十年(1980-2010)

    《歌仔戏音乐三十年(1980~2010)》,从歌仔戏音乐的历史与审美引领我们进入“十年动乱”之后,大陆传统艺术复苏,歌仔戏音乐传统得到恢复和渐变的1980~1990年。紧接着李晖以学术的眼光分析了1990~2000年,随着大陆经济步伐的加快,娱乐方式的丰富多彩,戏曲在日渐式微的时候,歌仔戏音乐人无法回避地把流行音乐的思维引入歌仔戏的创作之中,在传统与流行乐的碰撞中产生出了创新的潮流。
  • 逃爱太子妃

    逃爱太子妃

    --每个人都在守候着自己的那份幸福----但是太多的人----只猜到了开始却猜不到结局--
  • 天生幸运儿

    天生幸运儿

    云泥大概是世界上最可怜的孩子了,五岁知道自己其实是孤儿,六岁魔法测试中感应不到魔法,七岁魔宠召唤中连一根草都不愿意当自己的魔宠,呜呜,哥哥姐姐们又一个比一个厉害,但是,为什么大家都这么喜欢她呢。姐姐哥哥无微不至的关心,妈妈时时刻刻的爱护,走到哪儿都是贵人,魔兽也是难得地改吃素了。什么叫天生幸运儿,无敌可爱云泥是也!能让神度折服的魔力!
  • 旋爱

    旋爱

    只因他在自己的生活里闪现过一抹温暖的微笑,所以就算知道他和她在一起只是为了一场赌局,她也沉沦了,可是长久的默默在一边守候,她的心也会累的。他,因为一场赌局而和她在一起,却并不知道在自己身边的这个女孩子的美好,当他回首时,那个一直陪伴在他的身边的女孩是否还会在原地等他呢?
  • 弗洛伊德10:达·芬奇的童年回忆

    弗洛伊德10:达·芬奇的童年回忆

    此卷包含七部分内容,是弗洛伊德关于美学方面的重要论著。《戏剧中的变态人物》(1942)以精神分析观点解释了戏剧活动。《詹森的〈格拉迪沃〉中的幻觉与梦》(1907)揭示了压抑、幻觉、梦的形成。《作家与白日梦》(1908)提出了一种特殊的幻想活动。《达·芬奇的童年回忆》(1910)介绍了达·芬奇童年以来的感情生活,分析了其性心理的发展,阐释了他的艺术与科学活动的心理起源。《米开朗基罗的摩西》(1914)阐释了米开朗基罗所创作的摩西这一艺术作品。《陀思妥耶夫斯基与弑父者》(1928)探讨了陀思妥耶夫斯基的文艺创作。《非专业者的分析问题》(1926)指出了精神分析技术不是神秘的,更不是医生的专利。
  • 像猫一样生活,像狗一样工作

    像猫一样生活,像狗一样工作

    人是万物之灵,但是万物之中还有其他许多可爱的生灵。与人类接触最多的,恐怕就是随处可见的猫猫狗狗了。有的人喜欢它们,有的人讨厌它们,不管怎样,它们身上还是有很多值得我们人类学习的地方。能让身处职场的你学到精妙的为人处世的哲学和实用的工作哲学,能够帮助您成为人际关系达人,最终实现职场上的成功。 本书将向您呈现猫咪身上特有的处世哲学和狗狗身上独有的工作哲学。
  • 影响中国学生的经典成语故事之四

    影响中国学生的经典成语故事之四

    成语是语言中经过长期使用、锤炼而形成的固定短语,它是比词的含义更丰富而语法功能又相当于词的语言单位,而且富有深刻的思想内涵,简短精辟易记易用。并常常附带有感情色彩,包括贬义和褒义,当然,也有中性的。“影响中国学生的经典成语故事”汇集了众多的成语,详细地讲解了其释义及相关出处,使读者在增长知识的基础上、享受阅读带来的乐趣。