Striking workers in Chicago meet near the …
Years: 1886 - 1886
May
Striking workers in Chicago meet near the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company plant on May 3.
Union molders at the plant have been locked out since early February and the predominantly Irish-American workers at McCormick had come under attack from Pinkerton guards during an earlier strike action in 1885.
This event, along with the eight-hour militancy of McCormick workers, had gained the strikers some respect and notoriety around the city.
By the time of the 1886 general strike, strikebreakers entering the McCormick plant are under protection from a garrison of 400 police officers.
Although half of the replacement workers had defected to the general strike on May 1, McCormick workers continue to harass strikebreakers as they cross the picket lines.
Speaking to a rally outside the plant on May 3, August Spies advises the striking workers to "hold together, to stand by their union, or they would not succeed." (Green, James R. (2006). Death in the Haymarket: A Story of Chicago, the First Labor Movement and the Bombing that Divided Gilded Age America. New York: Pantheon Books.)
Well-planned and coordinated, the general strike to this point has remained largely nonviolent.
When the end-of-the-workday bell sounds, however, a group of workers surge to the gates to confront the strikebreakers.
Despite calls by Spies for the workers to remain calm, gunfire erupts as police fired on the crowd.
In the end, two McCormick workers are killed (although some newspaper accounts say there were six fatalities).
Spies will later testify, "I was very indignant. I knew from experience of the past that this butchering of people was done for the express purpose of defeating the eight-hour movement." (Green, Death in the Haymarket, pp. 162–173.)
Local anarchists, outraged by this act of police violence, quickly print and distribute fliers calling for a rally the following day at Haymarket Square (also called the Haymarket), a bustling commercial center near the corner of Randolph Street and Desplaines Street.
Printed in German and English, the fliers allege police had murdered the strikers on behalf of business interests and urged workers to seek justice.
The first batch of fliers contains the words Workingmen Arm Yourselves and Appear in Full Force!
When Spies sees the line, he says he will not speak at the rally unless the words are removed from the flier.
All but a few hundred of the fliers are destroyed, and new fliers are printed without the offending words.
More than twenty thousand copies of the revised flier are distributed.
Locations
Groups
Topics
- Industrial Revolution, Second
- Depression, Long
- America's “Gilded Age;” 1876 through 1887
- Haymarket affair
