The edge of anarchy The railroad barons, the Gilded Age, and the greatest labor uprising in America

Jack Kelly, 1949-

Book - 2019

The Edge of Anarchy by Jack Kelly offers a vivid account of the greatest uprising of working people in American history. At the pinnacle of the Gilded Age, a boycott of Pullman sleeping cars by hundreds of thousands of railroad employees brought commerce to a standstill across much of the country. Famine threatened, riots broke out along the rail lines. Soon the U.S. Army was on the march and gunfire rang from the streets of major cities. This epochal tale offers fascinating portraits of two iconic characters of the age. George Pullman, who amassed a fortune by making train travel a pleasure, thought the model town that he built for his workers would erase urban squalor. Eugene Debs, founder of the nation's first industrial union, was... determined to wrench power away from the reigning plutocrats. The clash between the two men's conflicting ideals pushed the country to what the U.S. Attorney General called "the ragged edge of anarchy." Many of the themes of The Edge of Anarchy could be taken from today's headlines--upheaval in America's industrial heartland, wage stagnation, breakneck technological change, and festering conflict over race, immigration, and inequality. With the country now in a New Gilded Age, this look back at the violent conflict of an earlier era offers illuminating perspectives along with a breathtaking story of a nation on the edge.

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Subjects
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Jack Kelly, 1949- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
308 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 282-300) and index.
ISBN
9781250128867
  • Maps
  • Part 1. May 1893-May 1894
  • 1. Boss Town
  • 2. Our Cause Is Just
  • 3. More Than a Joke
  • 4. A Heart for Others
  • 5. The Commercial Value of Beauty
  • 6. Well-Wishing Feudalism
  • 7. Armies
  • 8. The Works Are Closed
  • Part II. May 12-July 3, 1894
  • 9. Nothing to Arbitrate
  • 10. Dance of Skeletons
  • 11. The Crisis Has Come
  • 12. We Mean Business
  • 13. Not a Wheel Moving
  • 14. Disaster Threatens
  • 15. To a Standstill
  • 16. Ragged Edge
  • Part III. July 4-July 12, 1894
  • 17. We Shall Have Debs
  • 18. Strike Fever
  • 19. Pandemonium
  • 20. Day of Blood
  • 21. I, Grover
  • 22. Watching a Man Drown
  • 23. Last Resort
  • Part IV. July 13, 1894-October 20, 1926
  • 24. The Poor Striker
  • 25. Everything Was at Stake
  • 26. Strikes and Their Causes
  • 27. The Common Heartbeat
  • 28. True to Man
  • 29. Solidarity
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* In 1894, workers at the Pullman Palace Car Company near Chicago went on strike against their powerful employer, George Pullman. This set off the greatest labor action in U.S. history, one that threatened a true national strike. Kelly explores this event in all its conflict and confrontation. Workers, led by the indomitable Eugene V. Debs, rebelled against a company that had dictated their living conditions as well as their working conditions. George Pullman really believed he was a model employer, but he would not respond to workers' grievances. Unrest spread from Chicago across the nation, particularly into California. Realizing the threat this posed to the economy if not the body politic itself, President Cleveland called out troops against the counsel of Illinois governor John Peter Altgeld. Yet even army troops' loyalty was tested when they were asked to fire on their fellow countrymen. The strike may have failed and Debs was jailed, but legislation followed that protected worker rights. Kelly vividly portrays the personalities involved, from elected officials to labor leaders, and makes the tensions of the time quite contemporary.--Mark Knoblauch Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In which the robber barons earn their spursand their sobriquets.George Pullman (1831-1897) should be remembered as an innovator in the transportation sector. He was, as Kelly (Heaven's Ditch: God, Gold, and Murder on the Erie Canal, 2016, etc.) writes, an entrepreneur who "knew how to gather resources, command men, and negotiate deals," and even if credit for his long-distance railroad sleeper cars really goes to someone else, Pullman put it all together. At the height of the Gilded Age, he was well on the way to holding a monopoly, carving up the sector with other moguls. Put supply, demand, and sole ownership together, and you have a recipe for suppressed wages and labor unrest, personified here by firebrand organizer Eugene Debs, who called a strike when an economic recession shook the railroad industry, causing wages to fall. The railroad barons were quick to call on a reluctant President Grover Cleveland to intervene, while Debs scored early victories in the negotiations, and Pullman, who "had successfully fought against unions during his entire career," found himself confronting a powerful movement to organize. As Kelly notes, there were many flashpoints during the unrest, as when strikes stranded trains in midcourse and "women and children were left for up to twenty hours with no water or food." Debs renounced violence, but episodes of violence followed, most at the hands of law enforcement and the military. There are memorable moments throughout this fluid account, as when stock in the railyards of Chicago goes up in a wall of flames before which were, as one contemporary report put it, "men and women dancing with frenzy." In the end, the strikes broken, workers' families starved, Pullman refused to reduce his own salary: " We cannot,' Pullman murmured, do everything at once.' " He remained rich, but he is not well-remembered today, while Progressive Era reforms soon followed to reduce the barons' power.Kelly's vigorous narrative serves well to set down the facts of a turbulent, little-known history. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.