The 1937 Chicago Steel Strike: Blood on the Prairie
This in-depth history of the Memorial Day Massacre brings new clarity to the conflicting reports that left too many questions unanswered.
 
A violent period of American labor history reached its bloody apex in 1937 when rattled Chicago police shot, clubbed, and gassed a group of men, women, and children attempting to picket Republic Steel’s South Chicago plant. Ten died and over one hundred were wounded in what became known as the Memorial Day Massacre.
 
A newsreel camera captured about eight minutes of the confrontation, yet local and congressional investigations amazingly reached opposite conclusions about what happened and why. Now Chicago historian John Hogan sifts through the conflicting reports of all those entangled in that fateful day, including union leaders, news reporters, and an undercover National Guard observer revealed after seventy-six years.
1117165203
The 1937 Chicago Steel Strike: Blood on the Prairie
This in-depth history of the Memorial Day Massacre brings new clarity to the conflicting reports that left too many questions unanswered.
 
A violent period of American labor history reached its bloody apex in 1937 when rattled Chicago police shot, clubbed, and gassed a group of men, women, and children attempting to picket Republic Steel’s South Chicago plant. Ten died and over one hundred were wounded in what became known as the Memorial Day Massacre.
 
A newsreel camera captured about eight minutes of the confrontation, yet local and congressional investigations amazingly reached opposite conclusions about what happened and why. Now Chicago historian John Hogan sifts through the conflicting reports of all those entangled in that fateful day, including union leaders, news reporters, and an undercover National Guard observer revealed after seventy-six years.
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The 1937 Chicago Steel Strike: Blood on the Prairie

The 1937 Chicago Steel Strike: Blood on the Prairie

by John F. Hogan
The 1937 Chicago Steel Strike: Blood on the Prairie

The 1937 Chicago Steel Strike: Blood on the Prairie

by John F. Hogan

eBook

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Overview

This in-depth history of the Memorial Day Massacre brings new clarity to the conflicting reports that left too many questions unanswered.
 
A violent period of American labor history reached its bloody apex in 1937 when rattled Chicago police shot, clubbed, and gassed a group of men, women, and children attempting to picket Republic Steel’s South Chicago plant. Ten died and over one hundred were wounded in what became known as the Memorial Day Massacre.
 
A newsreel camera captured about eight minutes of the confrontation, yet local and congressional investigations amazingly reached opposite conclusions about what happened and why. Now Chicago historian John Hogan sifts through the conflicting reports of all those entangled in that fateful day, including union leaders, news reporters, and an undercover National Guard observer revealed after seventy-six years.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781625848352
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 04/13/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 172
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Author of Fire Strikes the Chicago Stock Yards with The History Press, Chicago native John Hogan is a published historian and former broadcast journalist and on-air reporter (WGN-TV/Radio). He has written and produced newscasts and documentaries specializing in politics, government, the courts and the environment.

Table of Contents

Preface 9

1 Godfathers 13

2 Mad as Hell 23

3 The Steelworkers Organize 33

4 Detour 43

5 Mr. Lewis and Mr. Taylor Have Lunch 51

6 Little Steel, Big Strike 59

7 "Here They Come!" 81

8 Death on the Prairie 95

9 A Long Time Coming 121

Bibliography 145

Index 149

About the Author 155

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