Pennsylvania's third major industrial city at this …
Years: 1877 - 1877
July
Pennsylvania's third major industrial city at this time, Reading, whose forty thousand citizens lie tightly but restively in the economic grip of Franklin B. Gowen, is also hit by the Strike's fury.
The city's commercial pace depends heavily on the movement of Gowen's Philadelphia and Reading Railroad and the activity of Gowen's Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company.
The railroad alone employs some fifteen hundred in the city.
On the surface, Reading appears an unlikely place for industrial unrest.
Ninety percent of the residents are native born and almost all the rest are German.
This city is home of the engine works and shops of its namesake Reading Railroad, against which engineers had already been on strike since April 1877.
Sixteen citizens are shot by state militia in the Reading Railroad Massacre.
Preludes to the massacre include: fresh work stoppage all classes of the railroad's local workforce; mass marches; blocking of rail traffic; trainyard arson; and the burning down of the bridge providing this railroad's only link to the west—to prevent local militia from being mustered to Harrisburg or Pittsburgh.
The militia responsible for the shootings had been mobilized by Reading Railroad management, not by local public officials.
Locations
People
Groups
- Pennsylvania, Commonwealth of (U.S.A.)
- Maryland, State of (U.S.A.)
- United States of America (US, USA) (Washington DC)
- Illinois, State of (U.S.A.)
- Missouri, State of (U.S.A.)
- Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
- Reading Company
- Pennsylvania Railroad
- Illinois Central Railroad
- West Virginia, State of (U.S.A.)
Topics
- Party System, Third (United States)
- Depression, Long
- America's “Gilded Age;” 1876 through 1887
- Compromise of 1877
- Great Railroad Strike of 1877
