It
was nearing 10:00pm, on Tuesday, 25 June, 1894, as the number seven
Illinois Central overnight train to St. Louis approached the Grand
Crossing. After heavy thunderstorms earlier, the evening skies were
partly cloudy, warm and humid. The Number seven had paused at 39th
street to pick up a few additional passengers. Then, at Hyde Park
station on 53rd
street, the train switched to express tracks and angled southwest
for seven miles until the headlamp illuminated the boom barriers at
the crossing.
All
trains, passenger and freight, were required to stop here. The
engineers would sound the locomotive whistles to request clearance to
proceed. The switchmen would confirm the crossing was clear and then
release the gates to swing back, to allow the trains to proceed. It
had happened hundreds of times every day over the last 30 years. But
tonight a crowd of perhaps 5,000 had gathered to witness the opening
of those gates. The expectation was that something different,
something dramatic was going to happen.
Chicago
newspapers had been reporting on the miserliness of George Pullman
for the last decade, until even the New York Times was forced to
admit,, “It has been the policy of the Pullman Palace Car Company
to reduce the salaries of its employees until the starvation point is
reached”. In 1884 Pullman managers showed up unannounced at the
front door of the widow of a Pullman mechanic and her three
daughters, and tossed “...their belongings out onto the street”.
A
Pullman seamstress reported her father had the misfortune to survive
a few weeks after being injured on his Pullman job. After his death,
Pullman had docked her pay until his back rent had been
paid. Complained another Pullman worker, “One fine morning a number
of men will knock on your door...” The company decided when to
paint your home, and when
to fix your roof
or your plumbing, And “....all charges for repairs will be
deducted from your wages next pay day...” As early as 1892 almost
half of Pullman residents had been forced to take in a boarder at $3
to $5 a week, just to make ends meet. All of this while things were
still “normal”.
After
the pay reduction, another worker testified under oath he had seen
men crying over their paychecks, because, “...they only got 3 or 4
cents after paying their rent.” By the strike, rents in Pullman
were $70,000 in arrears, and workers had begun to collapse on the
job, “...for want of food.” Upon hearing such complaints a
Pullman foreman told his workers, “If you cannot live...go out and
hustle for more.” And there can be little doubt some woman were
forced to sell their bodies, although Victorian morality forbid
admitting wives and mothers would do such things to feed their
children. Besides, the Pullman company would consider such behavior
grounds for instant expulsion. This was why the workers struck. With
the resulting lock-out, the poverty and starvation got only worse.
Chicago
Mayor and ex-railroad man Roswell B. Mason – not exactly a bleeding
heart - had written George Pullman, “...sixteen hundred families
including women and children, are starving...they cannot get work and
have not the means to go elsewhere...Some of them worked for your
company for many years. They must be people of industry and character
or you would not have kept them. Many of them have practically given
their lives to you....” The railroad man turned politician
explained, “The relief committee on last Saturday gave out two
pounds of oat meal and two pounds of corn meal to each family.” But
that effort had exhausted the committee's resources.
Pullman
vice-president Thomas Wickes responded with the empty platitude,
“...it is a man’s privilege to go to work somewhere else.” Of
course, during the austerity program, the officers, managers and
superintendents of the Pullman Palace Sleeping Car Company had not
suffered any pay reductions, nor had the stockholders been denied
their dividends.
The
public anger at the arrogance of George Pullman explained the crowd
at the Grand Crossing (above). No public announcement had been made. No
manifesto had been issued. But rumors in Chicago's environs had
whispered that five Switchmen had visited the offices of the American
Railway Workers. By the estimate of one journalist, there were
perhaps 1,500 railroad men in the crowd. But the remaining 3,500 or
so were wives and children of workers, and the curious, and, it must
be assumed, a scattering of railroad company spies. And when the
number seven train sounded it's short whistle, anticipation reached
it's peak.
A
reporter noted, “The mob began to gather at Grand Crossing at 7:00
o'clock, and by 8:00 0'clock became strong enough to interrupt
traffic...Everything, whether it carried a Pullman or not was halted
by the mob..Another attempt was made to get an Illinois Central train
through, but a man in the crowd threw himself down on the rails in
front of the engine and the engineer refused to move the train. The
aid of police was requested and the blockade was continued until a
detachment of blue coats and prevented any further interference with
the raising of the gates.”
The term “mob” was a gross
exaggeration, since no railroad equipment was damaged, and no workers
physically assaulted. And there were no arrests by the police on the ground. But there was never any doubt was to where the
sympathies of the crowd lay. The small Grand Crossing police force
had even donated $44 to feed the Pullman children.
Watching
over the Grand Crossing (above) this night was the ultimate company man,
Superintendent Thomas Collins. He had started as an office boy in the
late 1860's, then worked 3 years as a telegrapher in Peotone,
Illinois, then a supply agent, a dispatcher in Champaign, and then an
assistant to the Superintendent building the 40 mile spur line to
Dodgerville, Wisconsin. Since 1889 he had been in command of the
Grand Crossing. His eldest son Walter worked as the ticket agent in
the station there, and his son youngest son Howard expected to also
work for the Illinois Central Railroad as soon as he was 12 years
old.
Seeing
the Switchmen were not moving the booms in response to the Number
Seven's whistle, Collins walked over to the Switchman. We do not know
what Collins said, but reports say “...he expostulated with him
but it was of no avail”. As long as the train carried Pullman
cars, the booms would not move. And if Collins had moved the booms
himself, he would have personally been responsible for any accident
which resulted. So the booms stayed remained blocking the rails, and
the number seven train did not move one inch closer to St. Louis. In
fact no further trains passed through the Grand Crossing that night.
It was the beginning of the complete shutdown of the American rail
system.
Ray
Baker, of the Chicago Record testified under oath, “At the Grand
Crossing there was never much disturbance...The strikers and their
sympathizers...did not exactly stop the trains, but the gate men had
struck, and the engineers refused to cross over until the gates were
open, and there was no one to open them, and for that reason the
trains were blocked for the evening. There was no physical
obstruction at all. No destruction of property took place at all.”
About
ninety-minutes later the tower man who controlled the switches at
43rd street simply walked away from his position, leaving
two suburban trains stranded. Shortly thereafter, a freight train,
the Michigan Central Fast Mail Train and another Illinois Central
passenger train were caught, unable to cross the same unmanned
switches. Finally, about 1:00am, a supervisor occupied the 42nd
street tower and threw the switches, but that emergency fix was not
going to solve the problem George Pullman had created.
By
dawn, on Wednesday, 26 June, 1894, all 24 rail lines into and out
of Chicago were at a stand still. The Chicago Times praised the
strikers for their “...rapidity of conception and execution...”,
and noted the action was “...carried on with strict conformity to
law and order. With the exception of a crowd attracted out of a
curiosity...there was no boisterous talking, no threats were made,
and the few squads of police officers sent there to preserve order,
had nothing to do”. Four railroads immediately took themselves out
of the fight – the Chicago Great Western, the Baltimore & Ohio,
the Chicago and Northern Pacific and the Wisconsin Central all agreed
to drop Pullman cars from their trains.
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