| Haymarket affair |
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This 1886 engraving was the most widely reproduced image of the Haymarket massacre. It shows Methodist pastor Samuel Fielden speaking, the bomb exploding, and the riot beginning simultaneously; in reality, Fielden had finished speaking before the explosion. [1] |
| Date | May 4, 1886 |
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| Location | 41°53′5.6″N 87°38′38.9″W / 41.884889°N 87.644139°W / 41.884889; -87.644139 |
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| Goals | Eight-hour work day |
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| Methods | - Strikes
- protest
- demonstrations
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Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions |
Chicago Police Department |
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August Spies Albert Parsons Samuel Fielden
Carter Harrison III (mayor) John Bonfield (police inspector)
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Deaths: 8 (including 4 who were executed) Injuries: 70+ Arrests: 100+ |
Deaths: 7 |
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Haymarket Square, Chicago, Illinois |
Labor disputes by sector |
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Agricultural strikes |
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- 1800s
- Thibodaux sugar 1887
- Cotton pickers 1891
- 1900s–1920s
- Oxnard 1903
- Seattle fishermen 1912
- Grabow lumber 1912
- Wheatland hops 1913
- northern Minnesota lumber 1916–1917
- Hanapepe sugar 1924
- Imperial cantaloupe 1928
- 1930s
- Imperial lettuce 1930
- Santa Clara cannery 1931
- Vacaville tree pruners 1932
- Wisconsin milk 1933
- Yakima hops 1933
- California agricultural (Santa Clara cherry, El Monte berry) 1933
- Great lumber 1935
- Stockton cannery 1937
- 1940s–present
- Hawaiian sugar 1946
- Puget Sound fishermen 1949
- Delano grape (1965–1970)
- Salad Bowl 1970
- Watsonville Cannery (1985–1987)
- Frito-Lay 2021
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Coal Wars |
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- 1870s – 1900s
- Mahoning Valley strike 1873
- Morewood massacre 1891
- Coal Creek War
- Bituminous coal strike 1894
- Lattimer massacre 1897
- Illinois coal wars 1898–1900 (Battle of Virden, Pana riot, Carterville Mine Riot)
- Anthracite coal strike 1902
- Carbon county strike 1903–04
- 1910s
- Westmoreland strike 1910–11
- Paint Creek mine war 1912
- Colorado Coalfield War 1913–14 (Ludlow Massacre, The 10-Day War)
- Hartford coal mine riot 1914
- Wheelbarrow Mine strike 1915–17
- 1920s – 1930s
- West Virginia coal wars 1912–21 (Battle of Matewan, Battle of Blair Mountain)
- Alabama miners' strike 1920
- UMW General Coal Strike 1922 (Herrin massacre)
- Indiana bituminous strike 1927
- Colorado Coal Strike 1927–28 (Columbine Mine massacre)
- Harlan County War 1931–1939 (Battle of Evarts)
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- 1800s
- 1900s
- Sweden 1909
- Philadelphia 1910
- Vancouver 1918
- Seattle
- Winnipeg 1919
- Germany 1920
- San Francisco
- Minneapolis 1934
- Oakland 1946
- Austria 1950
- Ghana 1950
- Finland 1956
- Paraguay 1958
- Namibia 1971
- Uruguay 1973
- Spain 1988
- 2000s
- Guinea 2007
- Egypt 2008
- French Caribbean 2009
- Spain 2010
- European 2012
- India 2016
- Brazil
- Catalan 2017
- Catalan 2019
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US manufacturing strikes |
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- 1800s–1920s
- Cigars 1877
- El Paso smelters 1913
- Studebaker 1913
- Standard Oil 1915
- Boston cigars 1919
- 1930s–1970s
- Tampa cigars 1931
- Auto-Lite 1934
- Kohler 1934
- Flint sit-down 1936
- Akron rubber 1936
- Remington 1936
- Ford 1937
- Chrysler Auto 1939
- General Motors 1939
- General Motors 1945
- Boeing 1948
- Kohler 1954
- International Harvester 1979
- 1980s–2000s
- Todd Shipyards 1983
- International Paper 1987-1988
- John Deere 1986–1987
- General Motors 2007
- Boeing 2008
- 2010s–2020s
- Oil refineries 2015
- Kohler 2015
- Jim Beam 2016
- Bath shipbuilders 2020
- St. Paul Park refinery 2021
- Volvo Trucks 2021
- Frito-Lay 2021
- Nabisco 2021
- Heaven Hill 2021
- Kellogg's 2021
- John Deere 2021
- United Auto Workers 2023
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Metal mining strikes |
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- 1800s
- Coeur d'Alene 1892
- Cripple Creek 1894
- Leadville 1896–97
- Coeur d'Alene 1899
- 1900s–1920s
- Colorado Labor Wars (Idaho Springs) 1903–04
- Cananea 1906
- Goldfield 1906–07
- Copper Country 1913–14
- Bisbee 1917
- Anaconda Road 1920
- 1930s–1970s
- Empire Zinc 1950
- Murdochville 1957
- Inco 1978–79
- 1980s–present
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Transport strikes |
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- 1800s
- Great Railroad Strike 1877
- Camp Dump 1882
- Great Southwest 1886
- Burlington 1888
- Buffalo switchmen 1892
- New Orleans waterfront 1892
- Pullman Strike 1894
- 1900s–1920s
- Chicago teamsters 1905
- New Orleans Levee 1907
- Illinois Central shopmen 1911
- United Kingdom railway 1911
- West Coast waterfront 1916
- United Kingdom railway 1919
- NYC Harbor Strike 1919
- Seattle waterfront 1919
- Portland waterfront 1922
- Railway shopmen 1922
- 1930s–1970s
- West Coast waterfront 1934
- Minneapolis teamsters 1934
- NYC teamsters truckers 1938
- Vancouver waterfront 1935
- Gulf Coast maritime 1936
- NYC tugboat 1946
- USPS 1970
- Longshoremen 1971
- 1980s–2000s
- Patco (air traffic controllers) 1981
- SEPTA Regional Rail 1983
- Pacific Coast Metal Trades Union 1983
- Pan Am 1985
- UPS 1997
- United Kingdom railway workers 2016-2019
- Montreal longshoremen 2020
- Montreal longshoremen 2021
- Stagecoach 2021-2023
- United Kingdom railway workers 2022-2024
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Sanitation strikes |
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- Memphis 1968
- St. Petersburg 1968
- Charleston 1969
- Atlanta 1977
- Atlanta 2018
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Service strikes in the United States |
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- 1800s–1920s
- Newsboys 1899
- NYC waiters 1912
- Actors 1919
- Boston police 1919
- 1930s–1970s
- Seattle Post 1936
- Fleischer Studios 1937
- NYC retail 1937
- Disney animators 1941
- Musicians 1942
- Hollywood 1945
- Writers Guild 1960
- Cleveland convention 1963
- St. John's 1966
- Memphis sanitation 1968
- St. Petersburg sanitation 1968
- NYC teachers 1968
- Baltimore municipal (police) 1974
- Atlanta sanitation 1977
- 1980s–2000s
- Writers Guild 1981
- Writers Guild 1988
- SF newspaper 1994
- Detroit newspaper 1995
- Verizon 2000
- Broadway musicians 2003
- CA supermarkets 2003
- UM Janitors 2006
- Umpires 2006
- Writers Guild 2007
- Stagehands 2007
- CBS News 2007
- 2010s
- Government (Wisconsin) 2011
- Fight for $15 2012–2019
- Tacoma nurses 2014
- Verizon 2016
- Video games 2016
- Teachers (AZ, CO, Los Angeles, NC, OK, WV) 2018–2019
- Hotels 2018
- Stop & Shop 2019
- 2020s
- UC Santa Cruz 2020
- University of California 2022
- Medieval Times 2023
- Writers Guild 2023
- SAG-AFTRA 2023
- Video games 2024
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Steel strikes in the US |
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- 1800s–1920s
- U.S. Steel recognition 1901
- Pressed Steel Car 1909
- 1930s–1970s
- Little Steel (Memorial Day massacre) 1937
- Nationwide 1946
- Nationwide 1952
- Nationwide 1959
- 1980s–2020s
- USX 1986
- Allegheny Technologies 2021
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North American transit strikes |
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Streetcar strikes
- St. Louis 1900
- Indianapolis 1892
- Los Angeles 1903
- San Francisco 1907
- Pensacola 1908
- Columbus 1910
- Philadelphia 1910
- Indianapolis 1913
- St. John 1914
- Atlanta 1916
- Portland, ME 1916
- Bloomington, IL 1917
- Twin Cities 1917
- Los Angeles 1919
- New Orleans 1920
- Denver 1920
- New Orleans 1929
- 1930s–1970s
- Century Airlines 1932
- Philadelphia 1944
- New York City 1949
- Atlanta 1950
- New York City 1966
- 1980s–2020s
- Greyhound 1983
- New York City 2005
- Toronto 2006
- Toronto 2008
- Lyft and Uber 2019
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Textile strikes in United States |
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- 1800s
- Mill Women 1834
- Paterson 1835
- Mill Women 1836
- New England shoe 1860
- North Adams shoe 1870
- 1900s–1920s
- Skowhegan 1907
- New York shirtwaist 1909
- Chicago garment 1910
- Lawrence 1912
- Little Falls 1912–1913
- Hopedale 1913
- Paterson silk 1913
- Ipswich Mills 1913
- Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills 1914–1915
- New England 1922
- Passaic 1926
- New Bedford 1928
- Loray Mill 1929
- 1930s–1970s
- Los Angeles garment 1933
- National 1934
- Lewiston-Auburn shoe 1937
- Montreal Cotton 1946
- 1980s–2000s
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- 1800s
- 1900s
- Sweden 1909
- Philadelphia 1910
- Vancouver 1918
- Seattle
- Winnipeg 1919
- Germany 1920
- San Francisco
- Minneapolis 1934
- Oakland 1946
- Austria 1950
- Ghana 1950
- Finland 1956
- Paraguay 1958
- Namibia 1971
- Uruguay 1973
- Spain 1988
- 2000s
- Guinea 2007
- Egypt 2008
- French Caribbean 2009
- Spain 2010
- European 2012
- India 2016
- Brazil
- Catalan 2017
- Catalan 2019
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The Haymarket affair, also known as the Haymarket massacre, the Haymarket riot, the Haymarket Square riot, or the Haymarket Incident, was the aftermath of a bombing that took place at a labor demonstration on May 4, 1886 at Haymarket Square in Chicago, Illinois. The rally began peacefully in support of workers striking for an eight-hour work day; it was held the day after a May 3 rally at a McCormick Harvesting Machine Company plant on the West Side of Chicago, during which two demonstrators had been killed and many demonstrators and police had been injured. At the Haymarket Square rally on May 4, an unknown person threw a dynamite bomb at the police as they acted to disperse the meeting, and the bomb blast and ensuing retaliatory gunfire by the police caused the deaths of seven police officers and at least four civilians; dozens of others were wounded.
Eight anarchists were charged with the bombing. They were convicted of conspiracy in the internationally publicized legal proceedings. The evidence put forward in the court trial was that one of the defendants may have built the bomb but none of those on trial had thrown it, and only two of the eight were at the Haymarket at the time. Seven were sentenced to death and one to a term of 15 years in prison. Illinois Governor Richard J. Oglesby commuted two of the sentences to terms of life in prison; another died by suicide in jail before his scheduled execution. The other four were hanged on November 11, 1887. In 1893, Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld pardoned the remaining defendant and criticized the trial.
The site of the incident was designated a Chicago landmark in 1992, and a sculpture was dedicated there in 2004. In addition, the Haymarket Martyrs' Monument was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1997 at the defendants' burial site in Forest Park, Illinois. The Haymarket affair is generally considered significant as the origin of International Workers' Day held on May 1. It was also the climax of the period of social unrest among the working class in America known as the Great Upheaval and Great Railroad Strike of 1877.